Tourist information -
Calvi
Seen from the water, Calvi is a beautiful spectacle,
with its three immense bastions topped by a crest of ochre buildings,
sharply defined against a hazy backdrop of snow-capped mountains.
Twenty kilometres west along the coast from L'Île Rousse,
the town began as a fishing port on the site of the present-day
ville basse below the citadel, and remained just a cluster of houses
and fishing shacks until the Pisans conquered the island in the
tenth century. Not until the arrival of the Genoese, however, did
the town become a stronghold when, in 1268, Giovaninello de Loreto,
a Corsican nobleman, built a huge citadel on the windswept rock
overlooking the port and named it Calvi. A fleet commanded by Nelson
launched a brutal two-month attack on the town in 1793, when Nelson
lost his eye; he left saying he hoped never to see the place again.
The French concentrated on developing Ajaccio and Bastia during
the nineteenth century, and Calvi became primarily a military base,
used as a point for smuggling arms to the mainland in World War
II. A hang out for European glitterati in the 1950s, the town these
days has the ambience of a slightly kitsch Côte d'Azur resort,
whose glamorous marina, souvenir shops and fussy boutiques jar with
the down-to-earth villages of its rural hinterland. It's also an
important base for the French Foreign Legion, and immaculately uniformed
legionnaires are a common sight around the bars lining avenue de
la République
Social life in Calvi focuses on the restaurants and cafés
of the quai Landry , a spacious seafront walkway linking the marina
and the port. This is the best place to get the feel of the town,
but as far as sights go there's not a lot to the ville basse. At
the far end of the quay, under the shadow of the citadel, stands
the sturdy Tour du Sel , a medieval lookout post once used to store
imported salt. If you strike up through the narrow passageways off
quai Landry, you'll come to rue Clemenceau , where restaurants and
souvenir shops are packed into every available space. In a small
square giving onto the street stands the pink-painted Ste-Marie-Majeure
, built in 1774, whose spindly bell tower rises elegantly above
the cafés on the quay but whose interior contains nothing
of interest. From the church's flank, a flight of steps connects
with boulevard Wilson , a wide modern high street which rises to
place Christophe-Colomb , point of entry for the ville haute , or
citadel.
Beyond the ancient gateway to the citadel, with its inscription
of the town's motto, you come immediately to the enormous Caserne
Sampiero , formerly the governor's palace. Built in the thirteenth
century, when the great round tower was used as a dungeon, the castle
was recently restored and is currently used for military purposes,
and therefore closed to the public. The best way of seeing the rest
of the citadel is to follow the ramparts, which connect the three
immense bastions. From each bastion the views across the sea, the
Balagne and the Cinto Massif are magnificent.
Within the walls the houses are tightly packed along tortuous stairways
and narrow passages that converge on the diminutive place d'Armes.
Dominating the square is the Cathédrale St-Jean-Baptiste
, set at the highest point of the promontory and sitting uncomfortably
amid the ramshackle buildings. This chunky ochre edifice was founded
in the thirteenth century, but was partly destroyed during the Turkish
siege of 1553 and then suffered extensive damage twelve years later,
when the powder magazine in the governor's palace exploded. It was
rebuilt in the form of a Greek cross, as you see today. The church's
great treasure is the Christ des Miracles , housed in the chapel
on the right of the choir; this crucifix was brandished at marauding
Turks during the siege of 1553, an act which reputedly saved the
day.
To the north of place d'Armes in rue de Fil stands the shell of
the building that Calvi believes was Christopher Columbus's birthplace
, as the plaque on the wall states, but the claim rides on pretty
tenuous, circumstantial evidence. The house itself was destroyed
by Nelson's troops during the siege of 1794, but as recompense a
statue was erected on May 20, 1992, the 500th anniversary of Columbus's
"discovery" of America; his alleged birthday, October
12, is now a public holiday in Calvi.
Calvi's outstanding beach sweeps right round the bay from the end
of quai Landry, but most of the first kilometre or so is owned by
bars which rent out sun loungers for a hefty price. To avoid these,
follow the track behind the sand which will bring you to the start
of a more secluded stretch. The sea might not be as sparklingly
clear as at many other Corsican beaches, but it's warm, shallow
and free of rocks. You can also sunbathe, and swim off the rocks,
at the foot of the citadel, which have the added attraction of fine
views across the bay.
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