Nantes - translation to french
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Nantes - translation to french

CITY IN LOIRE-ATLANTIQUE, PAYS DE LA LOIRE, FRANCE
Nantes, France; UN/LOCODE:FRNTE; Nantais; Namnetum; Portus Namnetum; Naoned; Naunnt; History of Nantes; Geography of Nantes; Feldkommandant of Nantes; Cuisine of Nantes; Architecture of Nantes
  • 1897 advertisement for the LU Petit-Beurre
  • Boulevard de Launay, west of the city centre
  • 50px
  • [[Nantes Cathedral]], rebuilt in the [[Gothic style]] beginning in the 15th century
  • Castle of the Dukes of Brittany]]
  • Castle of the Dukes of Brittany]]
  • Nantes' coat of arms
  • The confluence of the Erdre and the Loire (where Nantes was founded) in an 1890s [[photochrom]]. The river channels in the picture were diverted and filled in during the 1920s and subsequently replaced with roads.
  • Section of the Roman city wall
  • The Euronantes business district
  • Tram on a [[green track]]
  • A ''France 3 Pays de la Loire'' set at La Folle Journée
  • A river bus and Nantes' iconic yellow crane
  • J. M. W. Turner's ''Nantes from the Ile Feydeau'' (1829–30)
  • A 19th-century greenhouse in the Jardin des Plantes
  • Johanna Rolland, mayor of Nantes since 2014
  • [[Jules Verne]], born in Nantes in 1828
  • The Stade de la Beaujoire
  • Main hall at the [[Machines of the Isle of Nantes]]
  • The port of Nantes in 1912, with the demolished [[transporter bridge]] in the distance
  • Detail of the spire of St Nicolas Basilica
  • Belfry]] of Sainte-Croix Church
  • Place Foch, with its [[Louis XVI]] column
  • Cours Cambronne, a terrace developed at the end of the 18th century
  • Brittany Tower]] in the background
  • City Hall
  • Typical 18th-century façades in Nantes
  • Port-Boyer and the Erdre
  • SPOT]] in 2004
  • The Château du Tertre on the university campus
  • Central Nantes in the first half of the 20th century. Waterways filled in from 1926 to 1946 are in brown, and buildings destroyed by American air raids in 1943 are in red.
  • Painting of the 1793–1794 [[Drownings at Nantes]]
  • shopping arcade]].
  • Elevation and hydrology map of Nantes
  • Dobrée Museum]]
  • The Graslin Theatre, opened in 1788
  • Beghin-Say sugar refinery
  • Loire-Atlantique, with Nantes (in black) surrounded by its urban area (in red) and metropolitan area (in yellow). Nantes Métropole is outlined in black.

Nantes         
Nantes, city in France
Nanterre         
Nanterre, district in the Parisian suburbs

Definition

Noyade
·add. ·noun A drowning of many persons at once, - a method of execution practiced at Nantes in France during the Reign of Terror, by Jean Baptiste Carrier.

Wikipedia

Nantes

Nantes (, US also , French: [nɑ̃t] (listen); Gallo: Naunnt or Nantt [nɑ̃(ː)t]; Breton: Naoned [ˈnãunət]) is a city in Loire-Atlantique on the Loire, 50 km (31 mi) from the Atlantic coast. The city is the sixth largest in France, with a population of 314,138 in Nantes proper and a metropolitan area of nearly 1 million inhabitants (2018). With Saint-Nazaire, a seaport on the Loire estuary, Nantes forms one of the main north-western French metropolitan agglomerations.

It is the administrative seat of the Loire-Atlantique department and the Pays de la Loire region, one of 18 regions of France. Nantes belongs historically and culturally to Brittany, a former duchy and province, and its omission from the modern administrative region of Brittany is controversial.

Nantes was identified during classical antiquity as a port on the Loire. It was the seat of a bishopric at the end of the Roman era before it was conquered by the Bretons in 851. Although Nantes was the primary residence of the 15th-century dukes of Brittany, Rennes became the provincial capital after the 1532 union of Brittany and France. During the 17th century, after the establishment of the French colonial empire, Nantes gradually became the largest port in France and was responsible for nearly half of the 18th-century French Atlantic slave trade. The French Revolution resulted in an economic decline, but Nantes developed robust industries after 1850 (chiefly in shipbuilding and food processing). Deindustrialisation in the second half of the 20th century spurred the city to adopt a service economy.

In 2020, the Globalization and World Cities Research Network ranked Nantes as a Gamma world city. It is the third-highest-ranking city in France, after Paris and Lyon. The Gamma category includes cities such as Algiers, Orlando, Porto, Turin and Leipzig. Nantes has been praised for its quality of life, and it received the European Green Capital Award in 2013. The European Commission noted the city's efforts to reduce air pollution and CO2 emissions, its high-quality and well-managed public transport system and its biodiversity, with 3,366 hectares (8,320 acres) of green space and several protected Natura 2000 areas.

Examples of use of Nantes
1. Dominique Perben a expressément demandé au président de la SNCF, Louis Gallois, de maintenir les liaisons Caen–Le Mans–Tours, Nantes–Lyon et Quimper–Nantes–Bordeaux–Toulouse.
2. Je l‘ai été, je le suis encore. – Quel rôle joue l‘histoire de Nantes dans vos choix culturels, urbanistiques ou économiques? – Nantes est née autour du fleuve.
3. Musée des beaux–arts, 10, rue Georges Clemenceau, Nantes.
4. Lieu÷ Cité des Congrès de Nantes. http÷//www.nantes.fr/julesv...
5. Nantes, «la ville des négriers», dira l‘historien Michelet.