Élorn

Élorn
Basin
Main source Brittany
River mouth Atlantic Ocean
48°23′6″N 4°24′27″W / 48.38500°N 4.40750°W / 48.38500; -4.40750 (Atlantic Ocean-Élorn)Coordinates: 48°23′6″N 4°24′27″W / 48.38500°N 4.40750°W / 48.38500; -4.40750 (Atlantic Ocean-Élorn)
Country France
Physiognomy
Length 56 km

The Élorn (in Breton - Elorn, without the accent) is a 56 km long river in Brittany, France.[1] Its source is in the monts d'Arrée, 1.5 km NNE of Le Tuchenn Kador, and it then runs through several small towns such as Sizun and Landivisiau before flowing out into the roadstead of Brest. This river is the birthplace of the legendary Dragon of the Élorn. The maritime part of the river stops at Landerneau, where the pont de Rohan blocks seaborne ships from sailing any further upstream. The river also crosses the château de la Roche-Maurice and many abandoned mills, and on the banks of its maritime part are several family properties belonging to families in Brest (Park an Coat, le Frout, Beau Repos, le Petit Manoir de Poul ar Velin). At low tide the mud is met, at high tide the sea flows over the countryside.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elorn.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, July 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.