Deauville
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- For the motorcycle of the same name, see Honda Deauville.
Commune of Deauville![]() Bathing Time at Deauville, by Eugène Boudin, 1865 |
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Administration | |
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Country | France |
Region | Basse-Normandie |
Department | Calvados |
Arrondissement | Lisieux |
Canton | Trouville-sur-Mer (chief town) |
Mayor | Philippe Augier (2001-2008) |
Statistics | |
Altitude | 0 m– (avg. 5 m) |
Population² (1999) |
4,520 |
Miscellaneous | |
INSEE/Postal code | 14220/ 14800 |
¹ French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 mi² or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | |
² Population sans doubles comptes: single count of residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel). | |
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Deauville is a commune of the Calvados département, in the Basse-Normandie région, in France. With its racecourse, harbour, marinas, conference center, villas, Grand Casino and sumptuous hotels, Deauville is regarded as the queen of the Norman beaches.
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[edit] History
The first reference to Deauville is in 1060. At this time the village was called A Enilla and was more of a fishing hamlet than a village. A Enilla comes from the Germanic Auwja Auwa meaning wet meadow. The village was originally up on the hill and a few houses were built next to the St Laurent chapel. Thanks to its situation near the coast, the village had a small harbour on the river Touques of little importance. Deauville or Dauville owes it all to the Duc de Morny. He described the village thus: Cité calme, aux rue désertes, elle forme avec Trouville, animée et bruyante, un contraste absolu. Mais ce manque de vie n'est, en réalité, qu'apparent, car des magnifiques propriétés, de même que les délicieux jardins qui les entourent, sont entretnus avec un soin on ne peut plus raffiné. In 1855 land was being bought at 5 centimes/m²; in 1862 the same land was worth 1 Franc/m². The buyer had indeed bought marsh land and sold constructible land. It was in 1858 that doctor Oliffe, who owned a villa in Trouville, decided to create a town of pleasure on the deserted sand dunes. In 1862 the first stone of today's Deauville was laid. The duc bought 2.4 square kilometres of marsh land and dunes for 800,000 Francs. The Touques was still unchannelled but during the Second Empire the low tides permitted the construction of walls. In the 1860s visits by Napoleon III made the coast of Normandy adjacent to Deauville fashionable, and soon speculators developed the infrastructure necessary to accommodate members of the Imperial court and the growing Parisian bourgeoisie. The railway arrived at Trouville-sur-Mer in 1863. Using the station called Trouville, passengers could reach Deauville in 6 hours from Paris. The locked harbour was dug up in 1866.
Morny, who had influence at Court, managed to persuade the aristocracy that staying on the coast would benefit their health. Land was bought and large villas, sometimes even palaces, were built. A casino and hotels soon followed and rich tourists came in their numbers.
Deauville hardly suffered during the First World War. It was during World War II with the German Occupation that Deauville saw most of its leisure proprieties confiscated for use by the occupying force.
During the 1960s, Deauville started to accept less fortunate visitors. It still is now a haven for the rich and famous as well as holiday makers.
Home to the Hippodrome de la Touques racecourse, the countryside around Deauville is the main horse breeding region in France and home to numerous stud farms. As a result, the city is twinned with Lexington, Kentucky, the most important locale for American horse breeding. The important Ventes de Deauville yearling auction is held in mid-August each year at Deauville.
[edit] Trivia
Deauville was the setting for part of A Man and a Woman. The screen adaption of Agatha Christie's "Murder on the Links" was set in Deauville.
F. Scott Fitzgerald mentions Deauville in "The Great Gatsby" as a place Tom Buchanan and Daisy visit on their honeymoon.
A common old joke among locals is that the wealthy bourgeoisie Frenchmen would keep their wife in Deauville and their mistress in Trouville, making light of the disparate socioeconomic statuses of the two neighboring seaside villages, Trouville being a working class fishing village and Deauville being home to exclusive shops and expensive real estate.
[edit] Twinnings
Deauville is twinned with:
Lexington, Kentucky, USA
Cowes, United Kingdom
Eicklingen (Wathlingen), Germany
Kildare, Republic of Ireland
[edit] Events
- Deauville Asian Film Festival
- Deauville American Film Festival
[edit] External links