Cultural events and festivities On 15 August is the communal festival of Cambrai, and one of the highlights of the popular local life. This great festival (or ) extends for ten days in the ''Place de l'Hôtel de ville'' [City Hall Square]. The day of 15 August is punctuated by the traditional parade of the giants , symbols of the city, and a fireworks display. This festival, originally a procession which took place the day after
Trinity Sunday, dates back to 1220. It was embellished over time with fireworks, banquets and cavalcades, and was regarded as one of the seven wonders of the
Cambrésis. Over the centuries the festival has changed, reflecting the concerns of the contemporary: Since attachment to France it has been celebrated on 15 August, festival of the
Assumption, in response to the wish of
Louis XIII to devote the Kingdom to the Virgin; in 1790 it celebrated the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and the
Fête de la Fédération; in 1802, with the signature of the
concordat, the image of Our Lady of Grace was again carried in procession, reinforced by the bust of
Fénelon. Under the
First Empire it celebrated his Imperial Majesty
Napoleon. In the 19th century, finally, interests turned more to local life, and the progress of science and industry. Musically, the town of Cambrai receives two festivals. Firstly, the
Juventus classical music festival. The Juventus association mark young talented European soloists. They are appointed, if they accept it, "Juventus Winners" during their first participation in a Juventus festival. Every summer the old and the new winners gather for a fortnight at the festival to prepare chamber music concerts in exceptional conditions.
Juventus, established in 1991 at the
Royal Saltworks at Arc-et-Senans, was set at Cambrai from 1998 with the help of the General Council of the department. Meanwhile, is an alternative music festival, which has been organised since 2003. It is organised during the month of April.
Les Féodales is a street show which represents the
Middle Ages. The last edition took place in 2008. The Cambrai city hall is the national headquarters of the Union for the horse breed of the "
Trait du Nord". The Trait du Nord national competition is traditionally held during the last weekend of July at the
Palais des Grottes. Bringing together the elite of the breed, it ends on Sunday afternoon on the ''Place de l'hôtel de Ville'' with a grand parade, the most important festive presentation in France of a breed of draft horses.
Media The
La Voix du Nord regional daily publishes a local edition. The ''L'Observateur du Cambrésis
is a weekly local news and announcements. The municipal newspaper Le Cambrésien'' is distributed in all the mailboxes of the city. Cambrai is part of the territory served by radio BLC, a community radio station whose programmes are broadcast from
Caudry. The inhabitants of Cambrai also have, in addition to some national radio stations, the programmes of
France Bleu Nord,
Chérie FM Cambrai and
RFM Nord. The city is covered by the programmes of
France 3 Nord and the national
DTT channels. It also received the regional channel of . Oxygen TV is a
web TV channel "100% of Cambrai" devoted to local information.
Religion The people of Cambrai have places of
Catholic,
Protestant and
Muslim worship. Cambrai is the seat of a Catholic
archbishopric,
suffragan of Lille since 29 March 2008. Until then, it was the opposite situation with the
Archdiocese of Cambrai as the metropolitan archdiocese and Lille and
Arras as its suffragans. The Archdiocese of Cambrai includes the arrondissements of Cambrai, Valenciennes and Avesnes-sur-Helpe. The
deanery of Cambrai brings together 13 churches grouped into two
parishes: Our Lady of Grace and Saint Vaast-Saint Géry. The
Baptist community has an Evangelical Baptist Church, just as there is a parish of the
Reformed Church of France. The Moroccan cultural and religious association of Cambrai manages the Al Mohssinine
Mosque of Escaudain.
Sports Cambrai has over a hundred clubs or sporting associations, including the playing in the Women's
field hockey Championship of France, as well as the team of which plays in the League (2nd division) and is the only professional club of le Cambrésis. Facilities include six gymnasiums, two swimming pools, of which the Liberty Swimming Centre was rebuilt and reopened in 2008, the Arsenal de Balagny, which was built between 1581 and 1595, abandoned by the army in 1967 and then rehabilitated as a gym, a leisure centre, a hockey stadium, a rugby stadium and many football pitches, including the Liberty Stadium, home of
AC Cambrai. Cambrai has a rowing club that goes under the name of
Union Nautique de Cambrai. The club is regularly present to the Rowing French Championships. In the early 2000s, one of its feminine team members made it to the World Championships. Since then, the club has been in the phase of beginning a new cycle based on renewed team members, especially youngsters. Every year, the club is home to the Regattas of Cambrai, during which clubs from Northern France gather for sprint-races on a 1000m distance. The game of is practiced traditionally in regions of Cambrai and Douai. Cambrai was the departure point for Stage 4 of the
2004 Tour de France and once again the departure point of Stage 4 in the
2010 Tour de France. Cambrai hosted the finish of Stage 4 in the
2015 Tour de France, on 7 July, with a route from
Seraing. In 2010, the newspaper ''
L'Équipe'' ranked Cambrai among the top five cities as the most sporty in France with more than 20,000 inhabitants, along with
Lorient,
Colmar,
Antibes and
Tarbes. The special prize of "Sport and Disability" was awarded to the city for its access to sport for people with disabilities.
French sartorial heritage The city was a pivotal center of
mulquinerie.
Sites and monuments A large part of the monumental heritage of Cambrai has disappeared over the centuries. It was firstly
Charles V, in order to build a citadel at the Mont-des-Bœufs, who ordered the destruction of the Abbey Saint-Gery of Gothic style in 1543. During the
French Revolution all of the religious buildings of the town were sold as national property and destroyed, including the
old cathedral. Only four churches, a converted attic, a hospital, a temple of reason and a prison, were spared. The dismantling of the fortifications, from 1894, led to the disappearance of many
gates. Some have been preserved thanks to the interventions of the Society of Emulation of the city.
World War I was again responsible for significant destruction, the German army having undermined and torched the city centre before retreating in September 1918. A total of 1,214 buildings were destroyed, including the city hall, which was rebuilt in the
neoclassical style before the Revolution by the architects
Jacques Denis Antoine and
Nicolas-Henri Jardin. Finally at the end of
World War II, in April 1944, and then again in May, July and until 11 August, Cambrai suffered Allied bombardments. A total of 55% of the buildings were heavily damaged and 13% were completely destroyed. Despite this considerable destruction, the city kept an important monumental heritage. Cambrai has been classified as a
City of Art and History since 1992, the first town of the Nord department to obtain this prestigious label.
Religious heritage The
Our Lady of Grace Cathedral was completed in 1703, in the classical style of the time, as the abbey church of the Holy Sepulchre. The church survived the turbulence of the
French Revolution as a Temple of Reason from 1794. The admirable
Gothic Cathedral from the 12th century was destroyed in the aftermath the Revolution of 1789. There is no trace on the present
Place Fénelon of the former building. Bishop Louis Belmas adopted the former abbey church as the new cathedral in 1801. The apse contains the monumental tomb of Fénelon, a masterpiece of the sculptor
David d'Angers, and the semitransepts with ''l'Icône Notre Dame de Grâce'' [the Icon of Our Lady of Grace] and the nine reputed
grisailles by
Geeraerts of Antwerp. The grand
organs were built by the house of of Ixelles in 1897. After the events of
World War I, extensive restoration was undertaken by the organ builder Auguste Convers, who brought the current instrument to 49 stops with 3,670 pipes. The building was classified in the inventory of
Historic Monuments on 9 August 1906. The most commonly called the College of the Jesuits' Chapel, completed in 1692, is a unique example of
Baroque art in France, to the north of Paris. The chapel served as a prison to the nearby Revolutionary Court in 1794, and it was classified in the inventory of Historic Monuments on 30 April 1920. The , a listed historical monument since 26 November 1919, is one of the oldest monuments of Cambrai. It contains a remarkable
choir screen in polychromatic marble carved by the Cambrai native
Gaspard Marsy as well as
La mise au tombeauu by
Peter Paul Rubens dating from 1616. The grand organs built in 1867 by
Merklin were the subject of a significant transformation in 1978. The current instrument has 41 stops. This church has been the subject of a restoration of the frontage and roofing over a period of four years (2011–2015). Other buildings of Cambrai are also classified or listed as Historic Monuments. The former has been registered since 2 March 1943, and the have been classified as Historic Monuments since 1949.
Military heritage The Citadel: Despite its dismantling in the 19th century, the Citadel of Charles V retained the counter-mine galleries which are today buried; the Royal gate and drawbridge, classified in the inventory of historical monuments on 14 April 1932, flanked on the back of two guardhouses and an arsenal of the 16th century. Among subsequent developments, a powder magazine, housing for officers and a "bombproof" barracks of the 19th century are also noteworthy. The is an old fortified château, which was built in the 11th century. Once isolated by the waters of the Scheldt, it has retained its towers and walls and especially buried ducts. The ducts include much graffiti which attests to the desperation of the prisoners, confined on the orders of the Count-Bishop. The (late 14th century), (17th century) and the (or Saint-Fiacre), the Caudron (1st half of the 15th century) and (16th century) are the remains of the medieval walls.
Civil heritage The , formerly the bell tower of the Church of Saint-Martin. The monument, built in the 15th century, became a belfry of Cambrai in 1550. Classified in the inventory of historical monuments on 15 July 1965, in 2005 the belfry was inscribed on the
UNESCO World Heritage List as part of the
Belfries of Belgium and France site, in recognition of its architecture and importance to the history of municipal power in Europe. The city hall, renovated in 1932, opens onto the ''Grand'Place'' by a majestic Greek-style façade, surmounted by a bell tower where two bronze bell ringers, giant and Moorish type, strike the hours on a big bell above the big clock: , the protectors of the city. The marriage hall contains a series of frescoes and can be visited on request. The Hotel de Francqueville (18th century) houses the rich collections of the , considerably enlarged and renovated in 1994. The relief map of the city, as it was at the end of the 17th century, is the starting point for essential guided tours of the city. The
Maison Espagnole [Spanish House], headquarters of the Tourist Office, dates from 1595 and is the last house which is half-timbered and gabled on regional-style street. Oak sculptures (
chimeras and
caryatids) which adorned its façade in the 19th century are exposed on the first floor inside after undergoing a serious restoration. One can visit its medieval cellars. This building has been classified in the inventory of historical monuments on 31 August 1920. The covered market, built after World War II, is home to lively Les Halles market days. The subterranean space The cemetery was opened to accommodate the bodies of soldiers who died in hospitals in the city, including at the end of the
Battle of Arras (April–May 1917) and the
Battle of Cambrai (November–December 1917). The cemetery currently has 10,685 German graves, as well as those of 192 Russian prisoners of war and six Romanians. Two spaces, forming the Cambrai East Military Cemetery, contain the graves of 501 soldiers of the British Imperial Army.
Environmental heritage Cambrai has the label "Floral City" with three flowers awarded by the
National Council of Floral Cities and Villages of France in the
Floral Competition of Cities and Villages. The current public garden dates from the 19th century, which saw the creation of green spaces in the middle to encourage
hygienics and which were liberated in addition to the areas occupied by the fortifications. This garden, divided into three distinct but contiguous parts, is located on the site of the old fortifications that surrounded the citadel built under
Charles V: • The "flower garden", designed by the landscape architect
Jean-Pierre Barillet-Deschamps, was established between 1852 and 1865 on . This garden was originally the only one planned but, at the insistence of the prefect of the time, it was increased to in 1864. • The "Monstrelet Garden" designed "in English", was soon added to the previous. It is so called because it houses a statue of
Enguerrand de Monstrelet, chronicler of the
Middle Ages who was the
Provost of Cambrai. In 1876, the bandstand was erected, built on the plans of André de Baralle. • The "garden of caves", built in the early 19th century, carries a total area of more than . The "caves", decorated with a waterfall, were the main attraction and gave their name to this part of the garden. They were completed in 1906 and in 2010 are awaiting rehabilitation. These gardens, and in particular their statues, were damaged by the two world wars. In 1972, a modern hall, named as the
Palais des Grottes [Mansion of Caves] and hosting exhibitions, trade fairs and concerts, was built in the middle of the garden of the same name. A few other squares or gardens complement the green spaces of Cambrai: Fenelon Square, established in 1861 to the designs of Barillet-Deschamps on the site of the
ancient metropolis and decorated in 1864 with a water fountain, that of the
Place Marcelin Berthelot, which dates from 1911. This is at the foot of the walls of the Château de Selles, dating from the same year. That beside the Arquets tower dates from 1954. The avenues and boulevards planted with trees and flowers to complete make Cambrai a "green" city.
Cultural heritage The
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Cambrai opened in 1847 to present revolutionary seizures, has been installed since 1893 in a mansion of the 18th century, the Hotel de Francqueville. Renovated in 1994, it has three departments (archaeology, fine arts and heritage of Cambrai) on of which the most important is that of art. It presents Flemish and Dutch paintings from the 17th century and French artists of the 19th and 20th century. A recent donation also allowed it to present a collection of geometric
abstractions of the second half of the 20th century. The Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art still officially retains its label "
Musée de France", although it was closed to the public in 1975. This private museum is managed by the diocese, which is looking for ways to reopen the collections to the public. The items of this collection may be the subject of loans for temporary exhibitions and include objects from the archaeological excavations of the city of Cambrai, architectural elements, sculpture, paintings, pieces of jewellery and liturgical ornaments. This museum's history began in 1926 when Monseignor , Archbishop of Cambrai, established a commission of religious history and sacred art aimed to inventory and preserve the archives and movable heritage of the diocese. Canon Cyrille Thelliez became secretary. In 1958, many religious objects from the diocese were gathered together and Thelliez founded the Diocesan Museum, the first religious art museum opened in France. The museum was installed in the former chapel of the Grand Seminary. The Théâtre de Cambrai was built in 1924 by the architect , on the site of a chapel of the 16th century which was destroyed during
World War I. The chapel had been abandoned for 25 years when its rehabilitation was undertaken in 1999. The renovated theatre was inaugurated in 2003. It is an Italian theatre of 700 seats which hosts various performances, including those of the
Scènes mitoyennes [Adjoining Stages] association and the . The
Palais des grottes [Mansion of Caves] situated in the public garden, is a large multi-purpose hall with a capacity of 1,500 people and which can accommodate concerts, (including the ), fairs or exhibitions. Its remarkable roof shape, formed of a
hyperbolic paraboloid (or "saddle"), was built in 1974 by then-advanced techniques and demonstrates a concrete form of architecture in the 20th century. The media library is a classified municipal library: It has an important old
fonds, with 956 manuscripts, the oldest dating back to the 7th century, from the confiscations made during the revolutionary era to religious communities, very important in the city, and emigrants of the region. This fonds was subsequently enriched by gifts, bequests and purchases. In 1975, it was one of the first institutions to adopt the title of "media library". It is divided into four services: Youth, adults, library and local history and old books. Cambrai has a national school of music and dramatic arts which obtained the
Conservatoire à rayonnement départemental label in 2007.
Culinary specialities The two best-known gastronomic specialties of Cambrai are the , a sausage traditionally made of ground veal (which was prohibited by European regulations, following the episode of
mad cow disease, until 2015), which associated gastronomic society is one of the most representative in the region, and the
Bêtise de Cambrai, a coated mint confection which is one of the most emblematic gourmet specialties of France. The gastronomy of Cambrai also accounts for other less known specialities: Tripe, liver pâté with plums, hare with grapes,
hochepot of
partridge with puréed lentils, but also the ,
fromage blanc with fine herbs, and also a cheese
trademarked as , or even crackers and
pain crotté [muddy bread] (a type of
French toast).
Heraldry, motto The motto of the city has changed several times: • 1579:
"Cambray, city of peace." • 1580:
"Concordia parvæ res crescunt" ("Harmony makes small things grow"). This motto is the same as that of the
United Provinces (
"Unity makes strength") • Current motto:
"Proud of its past, sure of its future." The logo of the city is a stylisation of the steeples of the
cathedral, the Saint-Géry Church and , a visual signature of the city, visible from afar. Locally, Cambrai is known as "the city of three spires".
Military life In 1711–1712, during the
War of the Spanish Succession, the regiments of and
Royal-Comtois had their barracks at Cambrai. From the late 19th century, two military units were stationed at Cambrai. The
1st Infantry Regiment was quartered at Cambrai from 1870 to 1914, when it left for Belgium, before returning in 1919. It was split between the citadel and the Renel barracks. In 1940 it was again sent to Belgium, before being dissolved in 1942 in the free zone and did not return to Cambrai. The arrived in Cambrai in 1889 and is the Mortier quarter. This regiment was dissolved at the end of
World War I. After
World War II the Mortier quarter was assigned to the Selection Centre No. 2, today disbanded. Until 2012, the "
René Mouchotte" was near the city, founded in 1953 and which hosted the 01.012 Fighter Squadron "Cambrésis" created in 1952, the 02.012 "Picardy" and the 03.012 "Cornouailles" [Cornwall], as well as a ground-to-air defence squadron.
Cambrai in literature and cinema •
Ernst Jünger in
Storm of Steel, dedicated to
World War I, described Cambrai in 1917: • The streets of Cambrai served as a backdrop to
Sang noir [Black Blood], a 90-minute fiction filmed from 7 March to 6 April 2006 through Production of
France 3 Lille, based on the novel of the same name by
Louis Guilloux which takes place in 1917 in a small town, far from the
Western Front. • In 2007, the construction of the bypass of Cambrai was used for the filming of the movie
In the Beginning by
Xavier Giannoli. Some scenes of the film
Présumé coupable [Presumed Guilty], by Vincent Garenq, were shot at Cambrai in April 2010. • The comic book
Asterix and the Banquet by
Goscinny and
Uderzo have a journey to various cities in Roman Gaul, including
Camaracum (Cambrai):
Asterix and
Obelix buy
bêtises. • The young-adult novel
Les Bêtises de Cambrai (Airvey, 2011) by Eric Callens.
Cambrai and philately Four postage stamps have been issued in connection with the city of Cambrai: • 10 July 1947, a stamp commemorating
Fénelon, Archbishop of Cambrai, with a face value of 4.50
Francs. • 19 February 1972, a stamp commemorating
Louis Blériot, born in Cambrai, with a face value of 0.50 Francs with surcharge: 0.10 Francs for the benefit of the French Red Cross. • 14 May 1977, a stamp commemorating the capture of Cambrai in 1677 and the annexation of Cambrésis by France, with a face value of 0.80 Francs • 25 July 2009, a stamp commemorating the crossing of the English channel by
Louis Blériot, with a face value of €2.00. ==Notable people==