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Favourite Regions
Normandy
Normandy, a region that has provided inspiration for countless artists
and writers, is the land of apple orchards and rolling farmland dotted
with villages of half-timbered houses. Boasting a wealth of abbeys and
châteaux, as well as a superb coastline, it offers something for
everyone.
The Land of William the Conqueror
Numerous events have inextricably entwined the history of Normandy with
that of Britain. William the Conquerors defeat of King Harold at
Hastings, the final battle of the Hundred Years War at Formigny
which saw the English ousted from France on 18 April 1450, and the D-Day
landings are but three of the most prominent. A memorial to the Missing
links the events of June 6 1944 to the conquest of England with the inscription:
Nos a Guilielmo Victi Victoris Patriam Liberavimus (We, once conquered
by William, have set free the Conquerors land).
Many Norman towns can claim a link of some kind with the regions
most famous historical figure. William was born at Falaise, where the
castle still stands. Caen later became his favoured residence, and William
bestowed two abbeys upon the town, the Abbaye aux Dames, a fine example
of Norman Romanesque architecture, and the Abbaye aux Hommes. Between
the two, he built a castle, enlarged by his son, Henry I. It was from
the port at Dives-sur-Mer, long since silted up, that William and his
fleet set sail for England in September 1066, and it is of course in Bayeux
that hangs the tapestry that recounts with such painstaking attention
to detail the preparations for the attack and the Battle of Hastings itself.
La Côte Fleurie
Normandy has a beautiful coastline, from the dramatic cliffs at Etretat
to the windswept bays of the Cotentin Peninsula. The beaches that were
the scene of the D-Day landings continue to draw hundreds of thousands
of people. Besides the cemeteries and memorials, one of the most poignant
reminders of the events of the summer of 1944 is the Pointe du Hoc headland
which is still pockmarked with shell craters and dotted with ruined bunkers.
Further east, another much visited area is the Côte Fleurie, a
25-mile stretch of coast between Cabourg and Honfleur lined with wide
beaches and grand villas and crowned by the seaside towns of Trouville
and Deauville. Both are synonymous with wealth and glamour, particularly
Deauville, where the rich and famous parade along the planches
(boardwalk). Trouville may nowadays take second place, but it was this
resort that first drew artists in the 1830s, followed soon after by the
rich and fashionable. So big was the trend, which was heightened further
still by the construction of a railway from Paris to the north coast,
that it was decided to drain the marshes on the other side of the Touque
estuary and build Deauville. Famous summer visitors included Emperor Napoleon
III, Alexandre Dumas, Henry James and Marcel Proust.
Despite the glamour of Deauville and Trouville, the real gem of the Côte
Fleurie is arguably Honfleur. It first became an important port during
the Hundred Years War, when it was fortified (only one gate remains of
the ramparts). Later, many of Normandys numerous explorers set sail
from here, including Samuel de Champlain, who founded Quebec in 1608 and
explored great tracts of Canada. However, visitors are drawn by its prettiness
and its timeless quality, attributes that have inspired many an artist.
The Birthplace of Impressionism
Normandy
is generally considered to be the birthplace of Impressionism. A lot is
owed to Eugène Boudin, a native of Honfleur. Born there in 1824,
he is recognised not only for immortalising Normandys coast in paintings
of blustery seas and women with billowing petticoats, but also as mentor
to one of the 20th centurys most prominent artists, Claude Monet.
Although Monet was born in Paris, he was brought up in Le Havre and started
life as a caricaturist. It was through this work that he met Boudin, who
recognised his potential and persuaded him to start painting out of doors,
capturing the effects of changing skies and light on the landscapes. Monets
skills developed further still under the tutelage of Dutchman Johann Barthold
Jongkind. Jongkind is one of several artists since dubbed the first
Impressionist, but the movement did not gain recognition until 1874,
when Monet exhibited some of his work, including the now famous painting
of the sun rising over the port at Le Havre (Impression: Soleil Levant)
in Paris. Even then, it was some time before Impressionism became fashionable.
Literature
Normandy has also been home to many great writers and has provided the
setting for numerous novels. Pierre Corneille, the dramatist often compared
to Shakespeare, was a native of Rouen, as was Gustave Flaubert, who later
set Madame Bovary in his home city. Born in Fécamp, Guy
de Maupassant lived in neighbouring Etretat for many years, setting his
tragic tale of Miss Harriett there. More recently, Jean-Paul Sartres
five years in Le Havre, with its wealth of sailors and seedy cafés,
inspired his first novel, La Nausée (1938).
Camembert, Cream and Le Trou Normand
Normandy
is associated with rich and varied cuisine. The Atlantic provides a vast
array of seafood - oysters, mussels, clams, whelks, shrimps, prawns, crabs,
limpets and winkles - and fish (a classic Norman dish is sole normand,
flavoured with mussels), while lambs are raised on the salt meadows, the
minerals in the grass flavouring the meat. The large number of dairy farms
means a ready supply of milk, cream and cheese. Indeed, within Normandy
the province of Calvados boasts no less than five appellation
dorigine contrôlée cheeses, a number which is above
the French national average. Any half-decent Norman restaurant will include
on its cheese board delights such as Pont lEvêque, Brillat
Savarin and Neufchâtel, as well as the regions most celebrated
cheese, Camembert.
Normandys wide range of produce is so full of flavour that little
embellishment is usually required, but when sauces are made to accompany
a dish, these are often laced with cream or another abundant ingredient:
calvados. Calvados is made by distilling cider (once in the case of appellation
réglémentée calvados, and twice for the superior
appellation dorigine contrôlée variety). It is this
potent liqueur that the French refer to as le trou normand as it
is often served between courses to revive appetites, literally to make
a hole for the remaining dishes.
We offer a wide selection of Country
Auberges in Normandy within our Shortbreaks programme. This also features
two popular Weekend Walks: the Heart
of Normandy Walk in the Suisse Normande, and the Woods
and Abbeys Walk
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