Environmental heritage Granville is located near the protected site of the Bay of
Mont Saint-Michel, the
cliff, the Haute-Ville and the
Chausey Islands, are themselves included in the list of sites protected by the of
Normandy. From north to south through the peninsula, the city is crossed by the
hiking trail GR 223 which traverses Normandy from
Honfleur to
Avranches along the coast. The town was awarded three flowers in the
Competition of flowery cities and villages thanks to its parks and gardens: The Christian Dior Garden, the Val-ès-Fleur Park of complete with a zoo, the squares of Marland, the
Arsenal, Chartier, Bisquine, the
Charles VII promenades, those of the harbour and of the Plat Gousset. The landscaped
golf course, on the territory of
Bréville-sur-Mer, was designed by
Harry Colt in 1912 and provides 27 holes of links golf. The Chausey islands were proposed for integration into the
Natura 2000 network in 1992, but the Council of the gave an unfavourable opinion in 2003, blocking the procedure to date. However, the
Conservatoire du littoral has acquired the Pointe du Phare. In addition, the town has on its territory a
sewage treatment plant and a waste processing plant for
incineration and
recycling. It has also set up
waste sorting and heads the Joint Association of Granville Coastal Areas for coastal protection against microbiological hazards. Granville - Jardin de Dior.jpg|The Christian-Dior Garden ValesFleurGranville (5).JPG|The Val-ès-Fleur Park
Architectural heritage from 1914, is based in Granville Granville heritage is rich of numerous religious buildings including the , The ancient church of Notre-Dame du Cap Lihou (1441–1796) it dominates the heights, constitutes an imposing granite building of the Romanesque / early Gothic style. It was built by the English during the
Hundred Years' War. The
choir is of 1641, the
nave of 1655, the
apse chapels in 1676 and 1688, and the
sacristy is of 1771, a listed
historical monument since 1930, it is decorated with stained glass by
Jacques Le Chevallier. As well as a thirteenth-century miraculous statue of Mary, visitors should note, on the eighteenth-century façade, the quatrain: ("If love of Mary is engraved on your heart, when passing do not forget to say
Hail to her.") The same verses are to be seen on the façade of Notre-Dame de Bon-Secours in Montréal. There is also
St. Paul's Church, the
St. Nicholas Church and the Protestant temple. The lower town was partly built on
land reclaimed from the sea. Granville's military past remains, the upper part of the old town is surrounded with the consisting of the
ramparts from the fifteenth century, the
drawbridge (Grande'Porte), the bloody theatre of the "Siège des
Vendéens" in 1793, built in the 15th century, destroyed and then raised in 1727, and listed as an historical monument since 2004. Inside the walls of the upper town are some beautiful houses of which several are concentrated on
Rue Saint-Jean. On the
Pointe du Roc overlooking the town, the Bazeilles
barracks built in 1758, the Gênes-Champagne barracks built in 1788 and the battery built in 1942 by the
German occupiers have been listed monuments since 1987 and 1994. The , built in the 15th century, registered as an historic monument since 1980, the Château de la Crête, and Saint-Nicolas'
Manor, built in 1786 by the shipowner Nicolas Deslandes, have been registered monuments since 1986 and bear witness to the importance of certain families in the region. The statue of
Pléville le Peley at the
port celebrates the most illustrious character of the city. The
casino of
Art Nouveau and
Art Deco style, built between 1910 and 1925 by architect , has been listed as an historic monument since 1992, the
hotel des bains of 1926, the railway station of the 19th century, the , built in 1828, according to a study of
Augustin Fresnel, high, , built in 1844, high, both classified as historical monuments, the on the rock of Sénéquet, off the coast and
27-hole golf course built in 1912 by
Harry Shapland Colt all date from the beginning of the resort nature of the commune. The covered
market was labeled 'Heritage of the 20th century' by the
DRAC. The residential tower
"Le Charme" [The Charm] located on
Rue Jean Rostand dominates the commune with its thirteen floors. There is a museum located in one of the gates which preserves invaluable documents enabling visitors to discover the history of the town through the centuries. Granville also is the home of the Christian Dior Museum, which is located in the fashion designer's childhood home,
Villa Les Rhumbs. After a first bid at the beginning of the 1990s, Granville postulated in 2009 to be labelled
Town of Art and History. Declared 1 July 2015, in the sub-prefecture of Avranches, the association law 1901 "Granville, country of the foreshore" which comprises the communes of Granville and Saint-Pair-sur-Mer, Jullouville and Carolles, is now the candidacy "Lands of Art and History" label. Granvilleleporche.jpg|The gatehouse of the Haute-Ville ChateauCreteGranville.JPG|The Château de la Crête BanqueFranceGranville.JPG|The Bank of France building HotelBainsGranville.JPG|The
hôtel des bains MarcheCouvertGranville.JPG|The covered market
Festivities The festive year of Granville revolves around various events. The takes place every year during the week before
Mardi Gras. It once celebrated the departure of the sailors who took advantage of the holiday before sailing for
Newfoundland. In 2007, for its 134th edition, it hosted more than 130,000 spectators. The feast of the patron saint of the commune is organised at
Pentecost. Each year, the third week of July is dedicated to the
Rue Sorties de Bains festival, of which the fifth edition took place in 2007. Outdoor concerts are held during the tourist season. The procession of the
Grand Pardon des Corporations et de la Mer [Atonement of the Corporations and the Sea] is traditionally held the last Sunday of July. The Night of Welders, a festival gathering metalworking artists, takes place during the first weekend of August. The same weekend the
Journée du Livre [Day of the Book] is organised, during which writers dedicate their works. Two fairs are held on the second Saturday in April and the third Saturday of September, a
flea market is organised during the weekend of 14 July and an
antique fair during the weekend before 15 August. A collectors fair is scheduled for the last Sunday in October. In 2005, the commune celebrated the centenary of the birth of
Christian Dior by organising, across the town, exhibitions and retrospectives on the work and life of the couturier. The Christian Dior Museum sometimes serves as a framework for events, as was the case in 2008 for the exhibition entitled "
Dandysmes - 1808–2008, of
Barbey d'Aurevilly at Christian Dior".
Personalities linked to the commune Several public figures were born, died or lived in Granville:
Born in Granville , work in bronze and granite of sculptor Serge Santucci and architect François Pougheol. •
Louis-Georges de Bréquigny (1714–1795),
historian and
paleographer. •
Georges René Le Peley de Pléville (1726–1805), vice admiral, Minister of Marine and Colonies • (1747–1816), mayor of Granville, member of the Council of Elders and the Tribunate •
Étienne-François Letourneur (1751–1817),
Director of the
First French Republic • (1767–1837),
frigate captain during the Revolution and the Empire, he commanded the
seventy-four ''L'Argonaute'' at the
Battle of Trafalgar • (1768–1841), captain of
La Piémontaise, was born and died in Granville •
Pierre Dumanoir le Pelley (1770–1829), vice admiral, he unsuccessfully commanded the vanguard of the line of Franco-Spanish vessels at
Trafalgar; politician and Commander of the
Legion of Honour • (1780–1858), royal courier • (1787–1851), winner of the naval battle of Arromanches in 1811 • (1787–1847), rear admiral •
Michel Pierre Alexis Hébert (1799–1887), lawyer and politician • (1807–1873), novelist, poet, politician, journalist and historian •
Louis Henri de Gueydon (1809–1886), vice admiral, governor of
Algeria •
Fortuné du Boisgobey (1821–1891), writer. • (1824–1898), painter • , (1841–1913), Auxiliary
Bishop of Rouen • (1841–1880), landscape painter and on porcelain • (1853–1907), professor of
anatomy at the •
Émile Guépratte known as ''"point d'honneur"'' [point of honour], (1856–1939), admiral, Grand Croix of the
Legion of Honour • (1867–1932), politician and industrialist •
Maurice Denis (1870–1943), painter, engraver, theorist and historian of French art •
Léon Carré (1878–1942),
Orientalist painter, winner of the
Abd-el-Tif prize in 1909 •
Léon Julliot de La Morandière, (1885–1968), Professor and Dean of the
Paris Law Faculty, then at the
University Paris II Panthéon-Assas, also director of the Comparative Law Institute in Paris • (1901–1999), actress of
Christian Dior in the garden of his house •
Christian Dior (1905–1957), legendary
couturier •
Denise Cocquerillat (1918-1999), archaeologist and Assyriologist, specialist in cuneiform texts • (born 1932), journalist •
Pierre Pican (1935-2018), Bishop of
Bayeux and
Lisieux • (born 1939), writer • (born 1939), navigator •
Angèle Delaunois (born 1946), writer •
Bernard Chenez (born 1946), cartoonist •
Michel Santier (born 1947),
Bishop of
Luçon and of
Créteil •
Jacky Robert (born 1950),
chef • (born 1955), politician •
Jacques Gamblin (born 1957), actor •
Christophe Auguin (born 1959), sailor, winner of the 1996–97
Vendée Globe yacht race
Died in Granville • (1791–1870), artist and songwriter • (1878–1951), painter, died and is buried in Granville •
Jean Tissier (1896–1973), actor •
Eric Crozier (1914–1994),
librettist and theatrical director •
Guy Degrenne (1925–2006), businessman
Others • Georges Bonheur, investor who was significant to the development of Granville as a seaside resort at the beginning of the 20th century. About the impact of his life and how it is still relevant in Granville today. •
Richard I de Grenville (died after 1142), Anglo-Norman knight •
Thomas de Scales (c. 1400–1460),
Knight of the Garter, founded the citadel •
John Granville (1628–1701), 1st Earl of Bath, soldier of the
English Civil War, lived in Granville •
George Granville (1666–1735), 1st Baron Lansdowne,
English poet, playwright and politician, lived in Granville •
Robert Carteret, 3rd Earl Granville (1721–1776), 3rd Earl Granville, lived in Granville •
Louis Jacob (1768–1854),
politician and
admiral, lived in Granville •
Honoré de Balzac (1799–1850), writer, stayed there in 1829. He evoked the headquarters in Granville in
Le Réquisitionnaire in 1831 • (1837–1927), shipowner, politician, mayor of Granville from 1882 to 1888, lived in Granville • (1859–1934), writer and poet, lived in Granville •
Maurice Orange (1867–1916), painter, lived in Granville • (1883–1945), poet, stayed in Granville during his youth •
Maurice Marland (1888–1944), chief of the
Resistance of Granville during
World War II, a professor in the same town • (1901–1987), writer and painter, lived at Chausey • (1914–2009), first president of the Court of Auditors in 1978–1982, was mayor •
Bertrand Poirot-Delpech (1929–2006), journalist, writer and
academician, lived at Chausey
Stendhal,
Jules Michelet,
Victor Hugo,
Adolphe Willette and
Gustave Goublier also all stayed in Granville.
Heraldry The coat of arms of Granville has changed several times during its history. The first, granted by
Charles VIII in 1487 was thus: •
Azure a dextrochère Or, issuant from a cloud of the same, which holds a sword argent mounted Or and placed between three stars of the same. The sword symbolising the patriotism of the city during the English occupation, the stars appearing on the night of 8 November 1442 when took over the city. The second coat of arms was established in 1697: •
Azure with dextrochère armed Or issuant from a cloud of the same and holding a sword argent, the guard and handle Or, surmounted by a Sun of the same. The Sun replaced the stars, this new coat of arms symbolised the importance of Granville in the monitoring of the coast of the Bay. In 1793, the influence of the
Revolution changed the azure to gules, but the arm is no longer armed and the sword became an honorary, which gives: •
Gules an arm stretched argent emerging from a cloud azure, holding a sword argent of a guard Or in pale. In 1811, the
First Empire offered new arms to the town,
Napoleon adding distinctive towns of second-order signs, a quarter charged with a capital N and a gold star and the exterior ornament of a mural crown: •
Azure on a cloudy fess argent, together with three stars Or, two in chief and one in point, dextrochère armed, sable, moving from sinister side of the shield and holding a sword high Or, quarter and trappings of the towns of second order. Finally, in 1816 under the
Restoration, the town returned to its coat of arms from 1697, unable to pay the registration fee to return to the original coat of arms. This coat of arms is now of the commune, the azure and Sun symbolising its seaside character, the sword recalling its military past of garrison town. The Granville arms appear on the
locomotives nos. X4791 and 8719C of the
SNCF under the sponsorship of the commune. The commune also has a
logo. The commune also has a
flag representing a quarterly of blue and white, with a white
cross encircled in blue and charged with a representation of the coat of arms in the centre. It is notably used on the commune's
yawls.
Gastronomy Granville is renowned for its marine products, including Granvillaise
galette with
scallops sprinkled with
cream, sea
bream in salt crust with virgin sauce (
mussels,
shrimps,
sea snails and
whelks), and the Granvillaise
sole accompanied with mussels and prawns. A speciality of the island quarter of
Chausey is also linked: The . On Saturday, a market is held in the town centre to purchase local produce. Finally, the Maurice Marland de Granville Hotel School guarantees the dissemination of knowledge of .
Granville dialect Beyond the
Norman dialect, there a dialect of the Granville area with its expressions. An example expression is
"achitrer" which means "to land a punch".
Granville in the arts and culture Granville is the subject of several
paintings including
Bateaux à Granville [Boats at Granville] painted in 1889 by
Maurice Denis,
Les brisants à la pointe de Granville [The breakers at the tip of Granville] painted around 1852 by
Paul Huet and kept in the
Louvre,
Plage de Granville [Beach of Granville] painted in 1863 by
Eugène Isabey.
Myths and legends • The
Chausey Islands are part of the ancient , a former place of
pagan worship, which covered the bay and which reportedly disappeared in 709AD under the waves. • According to a popular belief, the Chausey Islands consist of 52 islands at high
tide and 365 at low tide, as the number of weeks and days in a year, respectively. ==Gallery==