Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Épinal

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Country
  
Department
  
Canton
  
Épinal-1 and Épinal-2

Population
  
33,528 (2007)

Region
  
Arrondissement
  
Épinal

Intercommunality
  
CA Épinal

Local time
  
Saturday 9:28 PM

Épinal httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

Weather
  
9°C, Wind S at 5 km/h, 75% Humidity

Points of interest
  
Musée de l'image, Imagerie d'Épinal, Musée départemental d'Art anci, Parc du château, Château d'Épinal

Épinal ([epinal]) is a commune in northeastern France and the capital (prefecture) of the Vosges department. Inhabitants are known as Spinaliens.

Contents

Map of 88000 %C3%89pinal, France

Geography

The commune has a land area of 59.24 square kilometres (22.87 sq mi). It is situated on the Moselle River, 60 kilometres (37 miles) south of Nancy.

Main sights

The old town centre features the Place des Vosges, the Chapitre district, Saint-Maurice's Basilica, medieval castle remains and the Roman House (11th and 13th centuries). It is also known for its parks and gardens, as well as a large communal forest with arboretum (the Arboretum de la Forêt d'Épinal).

There are major fortifications, extended and maintained until the early 20th century. There is a legend, among the populace of Épinal, that Napoleon's ghost strolls the wall ramparts on 9 September of each year at 05:00. It was on this day and at this time that, in 1811, Napoleon gave his first and last oration to the city of Épinal, wherein he addressed the challenges posed by northern expansion.

There is an American military cemetery on the outskirts of the town where United States service members killed in World War II are buried.

Notable natives

  • Isabelle Cogitore (born 1964), historian
  • Jean-Baptiste Jacopin (1755-1811), general of the armies of the 1st Republic and the First French Empire.
  • Jean-Charles Pellerin (1756-1836), cartoonist, illustrator and French printer, famous for the popular images he printed from 1800.
  • Simon Lefebvre (1768-1822), general of the armies of the 1st Republic and the First French Empire.
  • Henri Hogard (1808-1880), geologist
  • Jean-François Cerquand (1816-1888), disco verer of the monument de La Turbie.
  • Paul Chevreux (1854-1913), archivist and historion of Vosges.
  • Émile Durkheim (1858-1917), founder of sociology
  • Louis-Ernest Mougenot-Méline, (1862-1929), architect
  • Louis Lapicque (1866-1952), physiologist, sspecialist of the nervous system and known for his discovery of the chronaxie.
  • Marcel Mauss (1872-1950), father of French modern ethnography and nephew of Émile Durkheim.
  • Marc Boegner (1881-1970), writer, thinker and pastor, president of the Fédération protestante de France and the World Council of Churches, a member of the Académie française.
  • Henry Daniel-Rops (1901-1965), writer and historian
  • André Jacquemin (1904-1992), painter and engraver, member of the Académie des Beaux-arts de l’Institut de France.
  • Jean-Marie Cavada (1940) journalist and politician.
  • Louis Guillon (1887-1947),French politician, depéuté of the Third Republic.
  • Léo Valentin (1919-1956), French soldier and adventurer, nicknamed "l'homme-oiseau".
  • Marceline Loridan-Ivens (1928), film director
  • Odile Redon (1936-2007), historian specialist of the Middle Ages
  • Philippe Séguin (1943-2010), Mayor of Epinal, French politician, President of the Court of Auditors under the Fifth Republic.
  • Bernard-Nicolas Aubertin (1944), bishop of Tours.
  • Ségolène Royal (1953), completed her high school in Charmes, before joining the Lycée Saint-Joseph of Epinal in 1968.
  • Laetitia Masson (1966), screenwriter and film director
  • Laurent Mariotte (1969),presenter and food writer.
  • Valérie Donzelli (1973), actress and film director
  • Jeanne Cressanges, novelist, essayist
  • Nicolas Matthieu (1978), writer, winner of the Prix Erckmann-Chatrian in 2014.
  • Jean-Sébastien Petitdemange, (1966), author and radio and television host.
  • Marie-Antoinette Gout, Righteous Among the Nations
  • Sportpeople

  • Gauthier Klauss (1987), canoeist.
  • Matthieu Péché (1987), canoeist
  • Aurore Mongel (1982), swimmer
  • Damien Nazon (1974), rider
  • Fabrice Lepaul (1976), football player
  • Guillaume Cecutti (1970), football player
  • Jean-Patrick Nazon (1977), rider
  • Julien Bontemps (1979), windsurfer
  • Maxime Mermoz (1986), rugby player
  • Patrice Vicq (1944), football player
  • Nacer Bouhanni (1990), rider
  • Rayane Bouhanni (1996), brother of the former, also a rider
  • Grégory Gaultier (1982), 2015 squash world champion
  • Estelle Vuillemin (1984), mountain biker
  • Economy

    Épinal is best known for the "Images d'Épinal" – which is now a common expression in French language – the popular prints created by a local company, the Imagerie d'Épinal, formerly known as the Imagerie Pellerin. These stencil-colored woodcuts of military subjects, Napoleonic history, storybook characters and other folk themes were widely distributed throughout the 19th century. The company still exists today, and still uses its hand-operated presses to produce the antique images. Other local industries include textiles, metals, morocco leather, precision instruments, and bicycles. There is a school of textile weaving.

    Politics

    Épinal is contained within Vosges' 1st constituency for elections to the National Assembly.

    Twin towns — Sister cities

    Épinal participates in town twinning to foster good international relations. Its current partners include:

    References

    Épinal Wikipedia


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