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Nîmes

Nîmes (Nimes in Provençal) is a city of southern France, préfecture (capital city) of the Gard département.

The city derives its name from Nemausus, perhaps the sacred wood in which the Celtic tribe of Volcae Arecomici (who of their own accord surrendered to the Romans in 121 BCE) held their assemblies (according to Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911) or perhaps the local Celtic spirit guardian of the spring that originally provided all water for the settlement, as many modern sources suggest. Or perhaps Stephanus of Byzantium was correct in stating in his geographical dictionary that Nemausos, the city of Gaul, took its name from the Heracleid (or son of Heracles) Nemausios.

Nimes must have been one of the richest and finest Roman cities of Gaul. Several important remains of the Roman Empire can still be seen in and around Nîmes:

  • The elliptical Roman amphitheatre, of the 1st or 2nd century CE, is the best-preserved Roman arena in France. It filled with medieval housing, when its walls served as ramparts, but was cleared under Napoleon. It is still used today as a bull fighting and concert arena.
  • The Maison Carrée (Square House), a small Roman temple dedicated to sons of Agrippa was built ca 19 BCE. It is one of the best-preserved Roman temples anywhere.
  • The nearby Pont du Gard, also built by Agrippa, is a well-preserved aqueduct that used to carry water across the small Gardon river valley.
  • The nearby Mont Cavalier is crowned by the Tour Magne ("Great Tower"), a ruined Roman tower.

Later monuments include:

  • The cathedral (Saint Castor), occupying, it is believed, the site of the temple of Augustus, is partly Romanesque and partly Gothic in style.

There is modern architecture at Nimes too: Norman Foster conceived the Carré d'art (1986), a museum of modern art and mediatheque; Jean Nouvel the Nemausus, a post-modern residential ensemble, and Kisho Kurokawa a building in the form of a hemicycle to reflect the Amphitheatre.

Tree-shaded boulevards trace the foundations of its former city walls.

Nîmes is historically known for its textiles. Denim, the fabric of blue jeans, derives its name from this city. Alphonse Daudet was born at Nîmes.

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Referenced By

2004 Tour de France | Alphonse Daudet | Baron Foster of Thames Bank | Carcassonne | Charles Martel | Communes of the Gard département | Counts of Toulouse | Departement | Departments of France | Département | Départements | Départment | Esprit Fléchier | FRia | Foreign Legion | FrancE | François Guizot | François Pierre Guillaume Guizot | French Departments | French Foreign Legion | French Republic | French arrondissements | French department | French départements | Frenchman | Gard | Guizot | ISO 3166-1:FR | Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Etienne | Jean Nouvel | Karl Martell | Languedoc | Latin Names of German Cities | Latin names of European cities | List of French Airports | List of capitals of subnational entities | List of departments of France | List of towns in France | Lord Foster of Thames Bank | Légion Étrangère | Montfrin | Norman Foster | Nouvel Jean | Paul Rabaut | Pont du Gard | Provincial capital | Regional capital | State capital | Trencavel | Via Domitia

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nîmes".

 

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