Tourist information -
Caen
Caen , capital and largest city of Basse Normandie,
is not a place where you'll want to spend much time: in the months
of fighting in 1944, it was devastated. Nonetheless, the city that
nine hundred years ago was the favoured residence of William the
Conqueror remains - in parts - impressive.
Its central feature is a ring of ramparts that no longer have a
castle to protect, and, though there are the scattered spires and
buttresses of two abbeys and eight old churches, roads and roundabouts
fill the wide spaces where prewar houses stood. Approaches are along
thunderous dual carriageways through industrial suburbs now prospering
once more following an influx of high-tech newcomers
A virtue has been made of the necessity of clearing away the rubble
of Caen's medieval houses, which formerly pressed up against its
ancient château ramparts . The resulting open green space
means that those walls are now fully visible for the first time
in centuries. In turn, walking the circuit of the ramparts gives
a good overview of the city, with a particularly fine prospect of
the reconstructed fourteenth-century facade of the nearby church
of St-Pierre . Some magnificent Renaissance stonework has survived
intact at the church's east end.
Within the castle walls, it's possible to visit the former Exchequer
- which dates from shortly after the Norman conquest of England,
and was the scene of a banquet thrown by Richard the Lionheart en
route to the Crusades - and inspect a garden that has been replanted
with the herbs and medicinal plants that were cultivated here during
the Middle Ages. Also inside the precinct, though not in original
structures, are two museums. Most visitors will probably prefer
the Musée des Beaux-Arts (daily except Tues 9.30am-6pm; 25F/?3.81,
free on Wed), which traces a potted history of European art from
Renaissance Italy through such Dutch masters as Brueghel the Younger
up to grand portraits from eighteenth-century France in the upstairs
galleries. Downstairs brings things up to date with some powerful
twentieth-century art, though there are few big-name works. The
other museum, the Musée de Normandie (daily except Tues 9.30am-12.30pm
& 2-6pm; 10F/?1.52, free on Wed), provides a cursory overview
of Norman history, ranging from archeological finds like stone tools
from the region's megalithic period and glass jewellery from Gallo-Roman
Rouen up to the impact of the Industrial Revolution.
The Abbaye aux Hommes , at the west end of rue St-Pierre, was founded
by William the Conqueror and designed to hold his tomb within the
huge, austere Romanesque church of St-Étienne (daily 8.15am-noon
& 2-7.30pm, free; 1hr 15min guided tours leave adjacent Hôtel
de Ville daily 9.30am, 11am, 2.30pm & 4pm, 10F/?1.52). However,
his burial here, in 1087, was hopelessly undignified. The funeral
procession first caught fire and was then held to ransom, as various
factions squabbled over his rotting corpse for any spoils they could
grab. A further interruption came when a man halted the service
to object that the grave had been constructed without compensation
on the site of his family house, and the assembled nobles had to
pay him off before William could be laid to rest. During the Revolution
the tomb was again ransacked, and it now holds a solitary thigh-bone
rescued from the river. Still, the building itself is a wonderful
Romanesque monument. Adjoining the church are the abbey buildings,
designed during the eighteenth century and now housing the Hôtel
de Ville.
At the other end of the town centre, at the end of rue des Chanoines,
is the Abbaye aux Dames , commissioned by William's wife Matilda
in the hope of saving her soul after committing the godless sin
of marrying her cousin. Her monument - the church of La Trinité
- is even more starkly impressive than her husband's, with a gloomy
pillared crypt, wonderful stained glass behind the altar and odd
sculptural details like the fish curled up in the holy-water stoup.
The convent buildings today house the regional council but are open
to the public for free guided tours (daily 2.30pm & 4pm).
Most of the centre of Caen is taken up with busy
new shopping developments and pedestrian precincts, where the cafés
are distinguished by names such as Fast Food Glamour Vault. Outlets
of the big Parisian stores - and of the aristocrats' grocers, Hédiard,
in the cours des Halles - are here, along with good local rivals.
The main city market takes place on Friday, spreading along both
sides of Fosse St-Julien, and there's also a Sunday market in place
Courtonne. The pleasure port , at the end of the canal which links
Caen to the sea, is where most life goes on, at least in summer.
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