Concarneau
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Commune of Concarneau |
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Konk-Kerne | ||
Concarneau's harbor and downtown | ||
Location | ||
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Coordinates | ||
Administration | ||
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Country | France | |
Region | Bretagne | |
Department | Finistère | |
Arrondissement | Quimper | |
Canton | Concarneau (chief town) | |
Intercommunality | Communauté de Communes de Concarneau-Cornouaille | |
Mayor | Gilbert Le Bris (2001-2008) |
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Statistics | ||
Elevation | 0 m–36 m | |
Land area¹ | 41.08 km² | |
Population² (2007) |
19,710 | |
- Density | 480/km² (2007) | |
Miscellaneous | ||
INSEE/Postal code | 29039/ 29900 | |
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | ||
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel) only counted once. | ||
Concarneau (Breton: Konk Kerne, meaning Bay of Cornwall) is a commune of the Finistère département, in France.
The town has two distinct areas: the modern town on the mainland and the medieval Ville Close, a walled town on a long island in the centre of the harbour. The Ville Close is now devoted to tourism with many restaurants and shops aimed at tourists. However restraint has been shown in resisting the worst excesses of souvenir shops. Also in the Ville Close is the fishing museum. The Ville Close is connected to the town by a drawbridge and at the other end a ferry to the village of Lanriec on the other side of the harbour.
In August the town holds the annual Fête des Filets Bleus (Festival of the blue nets). The festival named after the traditional blue nets of Concarneau's fishing fleet, is a celebration of Breton and pan-Celtic culture. Such festival can occur throughout Brittany but the Filets Bleus is one of the oldest and largest attracting in excess of a thousand costumed participants with many times the number of observers. In 2005, the 100th festival was celebrated.
Concarneau was also the setting for Belgian mystery writer Georges Simenon's 1931 novel Le Chien jaune (The Yellow Dog), featuring his celebrated sleuth Maigret.
Concarneau is a photographed town in the country. Tourists flock to the ancient streets each year and shoot thousands of reels of film in an attempt to capture this ancient fishing town.
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[edit] Economy
Fishing, particularly for tuna, has long been the primary economic activity in Concarneau. Concarneau is one of the biggest fishing ports in France. Since the 1980s, other industries have arisen, such as boat construction and summer tourism.
The Ville Close separates the working port from the yacht basin.
[edit] Demographics
Inhabitants of Concarneau are called Concarnois.
As of the census of 2007, the town has a population of 19,710.
[edit] Famous Concarnois
- Michel Desjoyeaux, navigator
- Guy Cotten, founder of a clothes factory
- Stephane Guivarc'h, French footballer, won the FIFA World Cup 1998 with the French national side
[edit] Twinning
- Bielefeld, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, since 1969
- M'bour, Thiès Region, Senegal, since 1974
- Penzance, United Kingdom, since 1982
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official website (French)
- Cultural Heritage (French)
- French Ministry of Culture list for Concarneau (French)