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Hyères

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Hyères



 
 
Hyères (Provençal
Provençal

Proven?al may refer to*Proven?al, meaning "of Provence", a region of France*The Proven?al of the Occitan language, spoken in the south of France...
 Occitan: Ieras in classical norm or Iero in Mistralian norm) is a town and commune
Communes of France

The commune is the lowest level of administrative divisions in the France. The French word commune appeared in the 12th century, from Medieval Latin Medieval commune, meaning a small gathering of people sharing a common life, from Latin communis, things held in common....
 in the southeast of France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
, in the Var département, located 15 km (10 m) east of Toulon
Toulon

Toulon is a city in southern France and a large military harbour on the Mediterranean coast, with a major French naval base. Located in the Provence-Alpes-C?te-d'Azur regions of France, Toulon is the Prefectures in France of the Var departments of France, in the former provinces of France of Provence....
. According to the town's official website, at the 1999 census
INSEE

INSEE is the France List of national and international statistical services for Statistics and Economic Studies. It collects and publishes information on the Economy of France and society, carrying out the periodic national census....
 it had a population of 53,258 inhabitants. The old town lies from the sea clustered around the Castle of Saint Bernard, which is set on a hill. Between the old town and the sea lies the pine-covered hill of Costebelle, which overlooks the peninsula of Giens.






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Hyères (Provençal
Provençal

Proven?al may refer to*Proven?al, meaning "of Provence", a region of France*The Proven?al of the Occitan language, spoken in the south of France...
 Occitan: Ieras in classical norm or Iero in Mistralian norm) is a town and commune
Communes of France

The commune is the lowest level of administrative divisions in the France. The French word commune appeared in the 12th century, from Medieval Latin Medieval commune, meaning a small gathering of people sharing a common life, from Latin communis, things held in common....
 in the southeast of France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
, in the Var département, located 15 km (10 m) east of Toulon
Toulon

Toulon is a city in southern France and a large military harbour on the Mediterranean coast, with a major French naval base. Located in the Provence-Alpes-C?te-d'Azur regions of France, Toulon is the Prefectures in France of the Var departments of France, in the former provinces of France of Provence....
. According to the town's official website, at the 1999 census
INSEE

INSEE is the France List of national and international statistical services for Statistics and Economic Studies. It collects and publishes information on the Economy of France and society, carrying out the periodic national census....
 it had a population of 53,258 inhabitants. The old town lies from the sea clustered around the Castle of Saint Bernard, which is set on a hill. Between the old town and the sea lies the pine-covered hill of Costebelle, which overlooks the peninsula of Giens. Hyères is the most southerly Mediterranean seaside resort in mainland France.

History


The Hellenic city of Olbia was refounded on the Phoenician settlement that dated to the fourth century BC; Olbia is mentioned by the geographer Strabo () as a city of the Massiliotes that was fortified "against the tribe of the Salyes
Salyes

Salyes , in ancient geography, was a people occupying the plain South of the Druentia between the Rh?ne River and the Alps.According to Strabo the older Greeks called them Ligyes, and their territory Ligystike....
 and against those Ligures
Ligures

The Ligures were an ancient people who gave their name to Liguria, which once stretched from Northern Italy into southern Gaul. According to Plutarch they called themselves Ambrones which means ?people of the water?....
 who live in the Alps." Greek and Roman antiquities have been found in the area. The first reference to the town dates from 964
964

964 was a year in the 10th century....
.

Originally a possession of the Viscount of Marseilles, it was later transferred to Charles of Anjou. Louis IX
Louis IX of France

Louis IX , commonly Saint Louis, was List of French monarchs from 1226 to his death. He was also Counts of Artois from 1226 to 1237. Born at Poissy, near Paris, he was a member of the House of Capet and the son of Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile....
 King of France (often known as "St Louis") landed at Hyères in 1254 when returning from the Crusades.

World War II

As part of Operation Dragoon
Operation Dragoon

Operation Dragoon was the Allies invasion of southern France, on August 15, 1944, as part of World War II. The invasion took place between Toulon and Cannes....
 on 15 August 1944, the joint US/Canadian First Special Service Force came ashore off the coast of Hyères to take the islands of Port-Cros and Levant
Levant

The Levant describes, traditionally, the Eastern Mediterranean at large, but can be used as a geographical term that denotes a large area in Western Asia formed by the lands bordering the Eastern shores of the Mediterranean, roughly bounded on the north by the Taurus Mountains, on the south by the Arabian Desert, and on the west by the M...
. The small German garrisons offered little resistance and the whole eastern part of Port-Cros had been secured by 06.30 am. All fighting was over on Levant by the evening but on Port-Cros, the Germans withdrew into old thick-walled forts. It was only when naval guns were brought to bear that they realised that further resistance was useless. An intense naval barrage on 18 August 1944 heralded the next phase of the operation – the assault on the largest of the Hyères islands, Porquerolles
Porquerolles

File:Courtade.JPGPorquerolles , also known as the ?le de Porquerolles, is an island in the ?les d'Hy?res, Var , Provence-Alpes-C?te d'Azur, France....
. French forces - naval units and colonial formations, including Senegalese infantry, became involved on 22 August and subsequently occupied the island. US/Canadian Special forces landing at the eastern end of Porquerolles took large numbers of prisoners – the Germans preferring not to surrender to the Senegalese.

Geography


Its position facing the Mediterranean
Mediterranean Sea

The Mediterranean Sea is a sea or Ocean off the Atlantic Ocean surrounded by the Mediterranean region and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Europe, on the south by Africa, and on the east by Asia....
 to the south makes it a popular location for tourism
Tourism

Tourism is travel for recreational or leisure purposes. The World Tourism Organization defines tourists as people who "travel to and stay in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes not related to the exercise of an activity remunerated from...
 in the winter, and facilitates the cultivation of palm trees; about 100,000 trees are exported from the area each year. As a result, the town is frequently referred to as Hyères Les Palmiers (Palmiers = palm trees).

Hyeres Boost Dsc00028
The three islands of the Îles d'Hyères
Îles d'Hyères

The ?les d'Hy?res is a group of three islands off Hy?res in the Var d?partement in France, in the south-east of France. The three mediterranean islands are named Porquerolles, Port-Cros, and ?le du Levant....
 (namely Porquerolles, Port-Cros and the Île du Levant
Île du Levant

?le du Levant, sometimes referred to as Le Levant, is a Mediterranean List of islands of France off the coast of the French Riviera, near Toulon....
) are located just offshore.

The commune has a land area of 132.38 km² (51.112 sq mi).

The British presence in Hyères


Lord Albermarle
Earl of Albemarle

Earl of Albemarle is a title created several times. The word Albemarle is an early variant of the French Aumale , other forms being Aubemarle and Aumerle, and is described in the patent of nobility granted in 1697 by William III of England to Arnold Joost van Keppel, 1st Earl of Albemarle as "a town and territory in the duchy of Normandy...
, The British ambassador, stayed in Hyères during the winter 1767-1768, but it was the two visits of the Prince of Wales
George IV of the United Kingdom

George IV was the king of Kingdom of Hanover and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from the death of his father, George III of the United Kingdom, on 29 January 1820 until his own death ten years later....
 during the winters of 1788 and 1789 which made Hyères popular with the British. The English agronomist Arthur Young
Arthur Young

File:Arthur Young .jpgArthur Young was an England writer on agriculture, economics and social statistics....
 visited Hyères on the advice of Lady Craven
Elizabeth Craven

Elizabeth Craven , Princess Berkeley , and previously Earl of Craven of Hamstead Marshall, was an author, playwright, traveller, and socialite, perhaps best known for her travelogues....
 on 10 September 1789. He mentioned the many British living there in his book Travels in France. The London born and Eton educated Anglo-Grison Charles de Salis
Charles de Salis

Charles de Salis, was born 25 July 1736 in the Parish of St. James, Westminster and died sine prole, Hieres, Provence, July 1781.He was the eldest son of Jerome, 2nd Count de Salis by his wife Mary, daughter of Charles, 1st Viscount Fane....
 died in Hyères in July 1781 aged 45, and was buried in the Convent des Cordeliers.

In 1791, Charlotte Turner Smith
Charlotte Turner Smith

File:CharlotteSmith.jpgCharlotte Turner Smith was an England poet and novelist. She initiated a revival of the English sonnet, helped establish the conventions of Gothic fiction, and wrote political Sensibility....
 published her novel Celestina, which is set in Hyères. but during the period of the French Revolution
French Revolution

The French Revolution was a period of political and social upheaval and radical change in the history of France, during which the French governmental structure, previously an absolute monarchy with feudalism for the aristocracy and Roman Catholic Church clergy, underwent radical change to forms based on Age of Enlightenment principles of cit...
 and the Napoleonic Wars
Napoleonic Wars

The Napoleonic Wars were a series of conflicts involving Napoleon I of France First French Empire and changing sets of European allies and opposing coalitions that ran from 1803 to 1815....
, the British returned home, but they returned after 1815. Joseph Conrad
Joseph Conrad

Joseph Conrad was a Polish novelist, writing in English. Many critics regard him as one of the greatest novelists in the English language, despite his not having learned to speak English fluently until he was in his twenties ....
, who lived for a while in Hyères, wrote his novel, The Rover, which is set in Hyères during those years.

William FitzRoy, 6th Duke of Grafton
William FitzRoy, 6th Duke of Grafton

William Henry Fitzroy, 6th Duke of Grafton was the son of Henry FitzRoy, 5th Duke of Grafton and his wife Mary Caroline Berkeley.He married Hon....
 spent the winter and spring each year at Hyères because he and his wife suffered from ill health. An Edwin Lee M.D. published in 1857 a book on the virtues of the climate of Hyères for the recovery of pulmonary consumption and in November 1880 Alphonse Smith first published The Garden of Hyères .

In 1883, Robert Louis Stevenson
Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Louis Balfour Stevenson , was a Scottish novelist, poet, essayist and Travel writing. Stevenson was greatly admired by many authors, including Jorge Luis Borges, Ernest Hemingway, Rudyard Kipling, Vladimir Nabokov, J....
 came to Hyères and for about two years lived first at the Grand Hotel (the building still stands in the Avenue des Iles d'Or), and then in a chalet called Solitude in the present rue Victor-Basch. He wrote then: "That spot our garden and our view are sub-celestial. I sing daily with Bunian, that great bard. I dwell next door to Heaven!". In later years he wrote from his retreat in Valima: "Happy (said I); I was only happy once; that was at Hyères."

In 1884, Elisabeth Douglas , daughter of Alfred, Lord Douglas, had a small "cottage" as she called it built on the Costebelle hill by the architect Thomas Donaldson
Thomas Donaldson (architect)

Thomas Leverton Donaldson was a British architect, particularly of churches....
  who used to spend his winters in Hyères during those years.

The British presence culminated in the winter of 1892 (21 March - 25 April) when Queen Victoria
Victoria of the United Kingdom

Victoria was from 20 June 1837 the Queen regnant of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and from 1 May 1876 the first Empress of India of the British Raj until her death....
 came for a stay of three weeks at The Albion Hotel. At that time, the British influence was so strong that shop signs were in both French and English. There was an English butcher, a chemist, two banks and two golf courses. There were also two English churches (plus one at the Grand Hôtel in Costebelle) whose buildings still exist: All Saint's Church at Costebelle and Saint Paul's English Church, Avenue Beauregard.

Some signs of this English presence have vanished like the small dell in the cemetery where once stood some hundred graves, some of which bore testimony to the aristocratic nature of the community such as that of Lord Arthur Somerset
Lord Arthur Somerset

Major Lord Henry Arthur George Somerset, Deputy Lieutenant was the third son of the Henry Somerset, 8th Duke of Beaufort and his wife, the former Lady Georgiana Curzon....
 or Richard John Meade
Richard John Meade

General Sir Richard John Meade, Order of the Star of India, Order of the Indian Empire was born at Innishannon County Cork to Captain John Meade of the Royal Navy and Elizabeth Quin....
. Other vestiges remain, like the fountain near the new public library in a square shaded by plane tree. The inscription reads: "In loving memory of Marianne Stewart who died on 18 August 1900. She laboured many years in the cause of mercy to animals. Her last wish was that a drinking fountain should be set up for them in Hyères".

Many wounded British soldiers were sent to the town to convalesce during World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
.

The American novelist Edith Wharton
Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton was an United States novelist, short story writer and designer....
 wintered in Hyères annually from 1919 until her death in 1937. The garden of her villa, Castel Sainte-Claire
Castel Sainte-Claire

The Castel Sainte-Claire is a villa in the hills above Hy?res, in the Var Departement of France, which was the residence of Olivier Voutier, a French officer who brought the Venus de Milo to France in 1820; and of American novelist Edith Wharton....
, is open to the public. The villa previously belonged to Olivier Voutier, a French naval officer, whose grave is in the garden. It was Voutier who discovered the Venus de Milo
Venus de Milo

Aphrodite of Milos , better known as the Venus de Milo, is an Ancient Greece statue and one of the most famous works of Sculpture of Ancient Greece....
 in 1820 on the Aegean island of Milos.

Communications


Airport The airport, which is known officially as the Toulon-Hyères International Airport, is situated to the southeast of the town centre, on a sandy plane close to the seashore. The area was first used by private aircraft at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1920, after the marsh had been drained, French naval aircraft used the field, and in 1925 it became an official base of the . It has been a commercial airport since 1966, but the navy maintains a presence within the perimeter. There are currently (2007) scheduled flights to and from Brest, Bordeaux, Brussels, London, Lorient, Paris, Rome, Rotterdam and Stockholm.

Miscellaneous


Hyères was the birthplace of Jean Baptiste Massillon
Jean Baptiste Massillon

Jean Baptiste Massillon was a French Catholic bishop and famous preacher, Bishop of Clermont from 1717 until his death....
 (1663-1742), churchman and preacher.

Hyères is twinned with Rottweil
Rottweil

Rottweil is a town in the south west of Germany and is the oldest town in the federal state of Baden-W?rttemberg.Located between the Black Forest and the Swabian Alb hills, Rottweil has about 25,000 inhabitants....
, Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 and with Koekelberg
Koekelberg

Koekelberg is one of the nineteen municipality located in the Brussels-Capital Region of Belgium. On January 1 2006 the municipality had a total population of 18,157....
, Belgium
Belgium

* A small German-speaking Community of Belgium exists in eastern Wallonia. Belgium's linguistic diversity and related political and cultural conflicts are reflected in the history of Belgium and a complex Communities and regions of Belgium....
.

Hyères is home to the Hyères International Fashion and Photography Festival, a huge fashion and art photography event which has taken place annually at the end of April since 1985.

This festival was among the first to recognize the talents of Viktor & Rolf
Viktor & Rolf

Viktor & Rolf is an Amsterdam-based fashion brand. The company was founded in 1993 by designers Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren . They are famous for fantastical and concept-based designs, mixing extreme ideas with glamourous high-fashion....
.

See also

  • Villa Noailles
    Villa Noailles

    The Villa Noailles is an early modernist house, built by architect Robert Mallet-Stevens for art patrons Arthur Anne Marie Charles Vicomte de Noailles and his wife, Marie Laure Bischoffsheim, between 1923 and 1925....
  • Costebelle
    Costebelle

    Costebelle is a quarter of the town of Hy?res in the southeast of France, in the Var departments of France....
  • Stade Perruc
    Stade Perruc

    The Stade Perruc is a multi-use stadium in Hy?res, France. It is currently used mostly for Football matches and is the home stadium of FC Hy?res....
  • Stade Gaby Robert
    Stade Gaby Robert

    The Stade Gaby Robert is a multi-use stadium in Costebelle, Hy?res, France. It is currently used mostly for Football matches and is the home stadium of Hy?res FC "B" and Hy?res FC "C"....


External links

  • (in French)
  • - the site of Villa Noailles, an avant-garde villa turned cultural center, home of the Hyères Fashion and Photography Festival, Design Parade and other events.