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Rochefort, Charente-Maritime

Rochefort, Charente-Maritime

FieldValue
nameRochefort
commune statusSubprefecture and commune
imagePort de Rochefort.JPG
captionPort in Rochefort
image coat of armsBlason ville fr Rochefort (Charente-Maritime).svg
arrondissementRochefort
cantonRochefort
INSEE17299
postal code17300
mayorHervé Blanché
term2020–2026
intercommunalityCA Rochefort Océan
coordinates
elevation m5
elevation min m0
elevation max m29
area km221.95
population
population date
population footnotes
image flagDrapeau Arsenal Rochefort.svg

|image coat of arms = Blason ville fr Rochefort (Charente-Maritime).svg

Rochefort (; ), unofficially Rochefort-sur-Mer (; ) for disambiguation, is a city and commune in Southwestern France, a port on the Charente estuary. It is a subprefecture of the Charente-Maritime department, located in the administrative region of Nouvelle-Aquitaine (before 2015: Poitou-Charentes).

Geography

Rochefort lies on the river Charente, close to its outflow into the Atlantic Ocean. It is about 30 km southeast of La Rochelle. Rochefort station has rail connections to La Rochelle, Nantes and Bordeaux.

History

In December 1665, Rochefort was chosen by Jean-Baptiste Colbert as a place of "refuge, defence and supply" for the French Navy. The Arsenal de Rochefort served as a naval base and dockyard until it closed in 1926.

In September 1757, Rochefort was the target of an ambitious British raid during the Seven Years' War.

Rochefort (centre-right) seen from Spot Satellite

Another infrastructure of early Rochefort from 1766 was its bagne, a high-security penal colony involving hard labour. Bagnes were then common fixtures in military harbors and naval bases, such as Toulon or Brest, because they provided free labor. During the Jacobin period of the French Revolution (1790–95), over 800 Roman Catholic priests and other clergy who refused to take the anti-Papal oath of the "Civil Constitution of the Clergy" were put aboard a fleet of prison ships in Rochefort harbour, where most died due to inhumane conditions.

Off Rochefort, from the island of Île-d'Aix where he had spent several days hoping to flee to America, Napoleon Bonaparte surrendered to Captain F. L. Maitland aboard HMS Bellerophon, on 17 July 1815, ending the "Hundred Days".

Rochefort is a notable example of 17th-century "ville nouvelle" or new town, which means its design and building resulted from a political decree. The reason for building Rochefort was to a large extent that royal power could hardly depend on rebellious Protestant La Rochelle, which Cardinal Richelieu had to besiege a few decades earlier. Well into the 20th century, Rochefort remained primarily a garrison town. The tourist industry, which had long existed due to the town's spa, gained emphasis in the 1990s.

Population

| graph-pos = bottom |1793 |20874 |1800 |15000 |1806 |14615 |1821 |12389 |1831 |14040 |1836 |15441 |1841 |20077 |1846 |21738 |1851 |24330 |1856 |28998 |1861 |30212 |1866 |30151 |1872 |28299 |1876 |27012 |1881 |27854 |1886 |31256 |1891 |33334 |1896 |34392 |1901 |36458 |1906 |36694 |1911 |35019 |1921 |29473 |1926 |28275 |1931 |26452 |1936 |29482 |1946 |29472 |1954 |30858 |1962 |28648 |1968 |29226 |1975 |28155 |1982 |26167 |1990 |25561 |1999 |25797 |2009 |25317 |2014 |24300 |2020 |23410

Sights

Map of Rochefort (around 1750)
''[[View of Rochefort Harbour from the Magasin des Colonies]]'' by [[Joseph Vernet]], 1762

Noteworthy buildings of the original naval establishment include:

  • a hospital, incorporating a School of Naval Medicine (now a museum)
  • the Arsenal with a monumental gateway and the National Navy Museum (Musée National de la Marine)
  • the Rope Factory (corderie), at over 370 metres long for centuries the longest manufacturing building in the world
  • three dry docks (radoubs) for shipbuilding and repair
  • a cannon foundry (not open to the public)

Other sights include:

  • a rare transporter bridge (pont transbordeur), consisting of a high level bridge containing a transport mechanism from which a ferry platform is suspended. This bridge, the Rochefort-Martrou Transporter Bridge, built in 1900, is the only remaining one in France and one of only eight still in service world-wide
  • the municipal theatre (la Coupe d'Or)
  • the railway station
  • Saint-Louis church
  • Pierre Loti's house (closed indefinitely pending completion of renovation work)
  • Museums of Naval Aeronautics, old-time trades (Commerces d'Autrefois), and local archaeology (la Vieille Paroisse)
  • Conservatoire du Bégonia, the world's largest begonia collection
  • L'Hermione, a replica of a 1779 frigate completed in the town in 2014
  • Place Colbert, town hall square famously known as the set of the 1967 musical film Young Girls of Rochefort

Notable inhabitants

Pierre Loti, 1892

Rochefort was the birthplace of:

  • Louis-René Levassor de Latouche Tréville (1745–1804), French admiral.
  • Charles Rigault de Genouilly (1807–1873), French admiral, conqueror of Vietnam.
  • Pierre Loti (1850–1923), a French naval officer and novelist. His house is now a museum.
  • Amédée William Merlaud-Ponty (1866–1915), Governor General of French West Africa.
  • Pauline Réage (1907–1998), pseudonym of Anne Desclos, author
  • Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908–1961), philosopher
  • Pierre Salviac, (born 1946), a French journalist, former rugby-match commentator and since then polemicist.

International relations

Rochefort is twinned with:

  • ESP Torrelavega, Cantabria, Spain
  • GER Papenburg, Lower Saxony, Germany

Climate

|Jan record high C = 17.0 |Feb record high C = 23.0 |Mar record high C = 26.2 |Apr record high C = 30.3 |May record high C = 33.2 |Jun record high C = 40.6 |Jul record high C = 41.4 |Aug record high C = 40.1 |Sep record high C = 35.5 |Oct record high C = 31.3 |Nov record high C = 23.0 |Dec record high C = 19.7 |Jan record low C = -8.8 |Feb record low C = -8.4 |Mar record low C = -8.7 |Apr record low C = -2.5 |May record low C = 2.0 |Jun record low C = 6.0 |Jul record low C = 9.3 |Aug record low C = 8.6 |Sep record low C = 4.7 |Oct record low C = -1.9 |Nov record low C = -5.8 |Dec record low C = -9.2 |access-date=21 November 2024}}}}

References

Movies: "Les Demoiselles De Rochefort" 1967 - Jacques Demy

References

  1. (2 December 2020). "Répertoire national des élus: les maires".
  2. {{Cassini-Ehess. 29352. Rochefort
  3. [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/7633058?geo=COM-17299#ancre-POP_T1 Population en historique depuis 1968], INSEE
  4. {{Cite EB1911. Gosse. Edmund William
  5. "Comité de Jumelage de Rochefort". Comité de Jumelage de Rochefort.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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