Marseille
From Free net encyclopedia
- Marseilles redirects here. There is also Marseilles, Illinois.
- Massilia redirect here. There is also a ship with this name; see The Vichy 80.
Template:Large French Cities Marseille (English alternative spelling Marseilles) (pronounced Template:IPA in standard French, Template:IPA in local Marseilles accent) (Provençal: Marsiho or Marselha, both pronounced Template:IPA) is the second largest city in France and the third metropolitan area, with 1,516,340 inhabitants at the 1999 census. Located in the former province of Provence and on the Mediterranean Sea, it is France's largest commercial port and the largest in the Mediterranean.
Marseille is the capital of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur région, as well as the préfecture (capital) of the Bouches-du-Rhône département.
Contents |
History
Ancient
Template:Expandsect Marseille was founded in 600 B.C.E. by GreeksTemplate:Fact from Phocaea as a trading port under the name Μασσαλία (Massalia; see also List of traditional Greek place names). Facing an opposing alliance of the Etruscans, Carthage and the Celts, the Greek colony allied itself with the expanding Roman Republic for protection. The association with the expanding Roman market saw the city thrive by acting as a link between the interior of Gaul, hungry for Roman goods and wine, and Rome's insatiable slave markets. Under this arrangement the city maintained its independence until the rise of Julius Caesar, when it joined the losing side in civil war, and lost its independence. It was the site of a siege and naval battle. During the Roman times, it was called Massilia.
Home port of Pytheas.
Medieval
Modern
Template:Expandsect Image:DSC 5208-MR-NotreDameDeLaGarde.jpg In 1934 Alexander I of Yugoslavia arrived at the port to meet with the French foreign minister Louis Barthou. He was assassinated there by Vlada Georgieff.
Economy
Template:Expandsect Image:Marseille.arp.750pix.jpg Marseilles' harbor is the biggest of the country, and one of the most important of the Mediterranean Sea.
Administration
Marseille is divided into 16 municipal arrondissements, which are themselves divided into quartiers (111 in total). The arrondissements are regrouped in pairs into sectors, and 8 sectors have a council and a town hall, like the arrondissements in Paris and in Lyon.
The municipal elections are carried out by amazing sector. Each sector elects its councillors (303 in total), one third of which are municipal councillors.
Number of councilors elected by sector:
Sector | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sector councilors | 22 | 16 | 22 | 30 | 30 | 26 | 32 | 24 | 202 |
Municipal councilors | 11 | 8 | 12 | 13 | 15 | 13 | 16 | 12 | 100 |
Total number of elected officials | 33 | 24 | 33 | 42 | 45 | 39 | 48 | 36 | 303 |
Image:Le Grand Escalier, Marseille.jpg The last mayors of Marseille :
- 1953-1986 : Gaston Defferre (already mayor between 1944 and 1946, relected in 1959, 1965, 1971, 1977, 1983)
- 1986-1995 : Robert Vigouroux PS (reelected in 1989)
- 1995- : Jean-Claude Gaudin UMP (relected in 2001)
The Sector Mayors :
- 1st sector (1st and 7th arrondissements): Jean Roatta (Representative) UMP
- 2nd sector (2nd and 3rd arrondissements): Lisette Narducci (General Councilor) PS
- 3rd sector (4th and 5th arrondissements): Bruno Gilles (representative) UMP
- 4th sector (6th and 8th arrondissements): Dominique Tian (representative) UMP
- 5th sector (9th and 10th arrondissements): Guy Teissier (representative) UMP
- 6th sector (11th and 12th arrondissements): Roland Blum (representative) UMP
- 7th sector (13th and 14th arrondissements): Garo Hovsepian PS
- 8th sector (15th and 16th arrondissements): Frédéric Dutoit (representative) PCF
The cantons of Marseille :
Marseille holds 25 of the 58 seats at the general council of the Bouches-du-Rhône. Since the last election, these 25 cantons are held by the following councilors:
- Marseille-La,Belle-de-Mai (pop. 25,878); General Councilor: Lisette Narducci PS (Mayor of the 2ème sector de Marseille)
- Marseille-Belsunce (pop. 27,992); General Councilor: Fortuné Sportiello PS
- Marseille-La,Blancarde (pop. 30,168); General Councilor Maurice Di Nocera UDF
- Marseille-Le,Camas (pop. 27,506); General Councilor: Antoine Rouzaud PS (Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-La,Capelette (pop. 34,292); General Councilor: Janine Ecochard PS
- Marseille-Les,Cinq-Avenues (pop. 29,846); General Councilor: Marie-Arlette Carlotti PS (Representative européenne)
- Marseille-Les,Grands-Carmes (pop. 29,060); General Councilor: Jean-Noël Guerini PS (Sénateur, Président du Conseil Général, Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-Mazargues (pop. 35,890); General Councilor: Didier Réault UMP
- Marseille-Montolivet (pop. 33,644); General Councilor: Maurice Rey UMP
- Marseille-Notre-Dame-du-Mont (pop. 31,107); General Councilor: Jocelyn Zeitoun PS
- Marseille-Notre-Dame-Limite (pop. 33,472); General Councilor: Joël Dutto PCF
- Marseille-Les,Olives (pop. 27,052); General Councilor: Marius Masse PS
- Marseille-La,Pointe-Rouge (pop. 31,116); General Councilor: Richard Miron UMP
- Marseille-La,Pomme (pop. 38,701); General Councilor: René Olmeta PS (Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-La,Rose (pop. 33,206); General Councilor: Félix Weygand PS
- Marseille-Saint-Barthélemy (pop. 37,629); General Councilor: Denis Rossi PS (Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-Sainte-Marguerite (pop. 36,868); General Councilor: Didier Garnier UMP
- Marseille-Saint-Giniez (pop. 34,621); General Councilor: Martine Vassal UMP (Adjointe au Maire de Marseille)
- Marseille-Saint-Just (pop. 32,749); General Councilor: Michel Pezet PS (Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-Saint-Lambert (pop. 26,218); General Councilor: Robert Assante UMP (Adjoint au Maire de Marseille)
- Marseille-Saint-Marcel (pop. 29,981); General Councilor: Jean Bonat PS (Municipal councilor of Marseille)
- Marseille-Saint-Mauront (pop. 40,392); General Councilor: Jeanine Porte PCF
- Marseille-Les,Trois,Lucs (pop. 25,324); General Councilor: Christophe Masse PS (Representative)
- Marseille-Vauban (pop. 29,668); General Councilor: André Malrait UMP
- Marseille-Verduron (pop. 35,752). General Councilor: Henri Jibrayel PS
Culture
Template:Expandsect Image:Place du Général de Gaulle.jpg Image:Madonna and Child Marseille.jpg Image:Musée des Beaux Arts Marseille.jpg Image:Église des Réformés.jpg Image:Jeanne d'arc Marseille.jpg
The French national anthem "La Marseillaise" is named for the Revolutionary troops from Marseille.
The most widely circulated tarot deck comes from Marseille; it is called the Tarot de Marseille, and was used to play the local variant of tarocchi before it came to the notice of people who used it in cartomancy.
Music
- The French rap band IAM is from Marseille
- Fonky Family
- Massilia Sound System
- Watcha Clan
Demographics
The vast majority of the Marsellaise are descendants of the waves of immigrants that arrived to the port in the early 19th century. Such as; Armenians, Spaniards, Italians, Greeks, Arabs, Jews, Russians and North Africans. Approximately 25 per cent of Marseille’s population is of North African origin, mostly Algerian, and Tunisian. The Jewish community is also the third largest in Europe.
Sights
- the old harbor
- Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde
- Château d'If, an ancient prison island, where The Count of Monte Cristo was jailed, in Alexandre Dumas' novel
- Unité d'Habitation de Marseille, by the Swiss architect Le Corbusier
- The calanques
Transportation
Template:Expandsect The metro is a rubber-tired train.
Marseille is served by the Aéroport de Marseille Provence, located in Marignane.
Miscellaneous
Template:Expandsect The city's main football club is Olympique de Marseille, UEFA Champions League winner in 1993 but tainted by the 1990s match fixing scandal by then-owner Bernard Tapie.
Births
Marseille was the birthplace of:
- Antonin Artaud (1897-1948), author
- Maurice Béjart (born 1927), ballet choreographer
- Jean-Henry Gourgaud, aka. "Dugazon" (1746-1809), actor
- Désirée Clary (1777-1860), wife of King Carl XIV Johann of Sweden, and therefore Queen Desirée or Queen Desideria of Sweden
- Adolphe Thiers (1797-1877), first president of the Third Republic
- Etienne Joseph Louis Garnier-Pages (1801-1841), politician
- Honoré Daumier (1808-1879), caricaturist and painter
- Joseph Autran (1813-1877), poet
- Olivier Émile Ollivier (1825-1913), statesman
- Joseph Pujol, aka. "Le Pétomane" (1857-1945), entertainer
- Edmond Rostand (1868-1918), poet and dramatist
- Vincent Scotto (1876-1952), guitarist, songwriter
- Fernandel (1903-1971), actor
- Eliane Browne-Bartroli (1917-1944), French Resistance, Croix de Guerre
- Louis Jourdan (born 1919), actor
- Jean Pierre Rampal (1922-2000), flutist
- André di Fusco (1932-2001), known as André Pascal, song writer
- Jean-Claude Izzo (1945-2000), author
- Zinedine Zidane (born 1972), soccer player
Deaths
- French poet Arthur Rimbaud died in Marseille on November 10, 1891.
- King Alexander I of Yugoslavia was assassinated on October 9 1934 in Marseille along with French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou.
Movies set in Marseille
- 37°2 le matin (1986)
- Baise-moi (2000)
- Bye-Bye (1995)
- Comme un aimant (2000)
- The French Connection (1971) and its sequel (1975)
- Gomez & Tavarès (2003)
- La Lune dans le caniveau (1983)
- Marius (1931)
- Marius et Jeannette (1997)
- Roselyne et les lions (1989)
- Taxi (1998)
- Taxi 2 (2000)
- Taxi 3 (2003)
- The Transporter (2002)
- Trois places pour le 26 (1988)
- Un, deux, trois, soleil (1993)
See also
External links
- Interactive Virtual Tour
- Marseille
- Early history
- Metro
- Marseille in Google Local
- The Jewish Community of Marseillesaf:Marseille
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