Marseille
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- Marseilles redirects here. There is also Marseilles, Illinois.
Template:Marseille infobox Marseille (English alternate spelling Marseilles) (pronounced in standard French, in local Marseilles accent) (Provençal: Marsiho or Marsilha, both pronounced ) is the second largest city in France, with 1,516,340 inhabitants in the metropolitan area 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.
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History
Marseille was founded in 600 BC by Greeks as a trading port under the name Μασσαλία (Massalia). It was overrun by Celts and then conquered by the Romans. During the Roman times, it was called Massilia.
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Economy
Marseille has a large and busy harbor.
Culture
The French rap band IAM is 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.
The French national anthem "La Marseillaise" is named for the Revolutionary troops from Marseille.
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Demographics
Marseille is known for its very large North African, particularly Algerian, Muslim/Arab population.
Attractions
- 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
Miscellaneous
The metro is rubber-tired.
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.
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
- Jean-Claude Izzo (1945-2000), author
- Zinedine Zidane (born 1972), soccer player
- Clara Morgane (born 1981), porn star
- French poet Arthur Rimbaud died in Marseille in November 10, 1891.
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See also
External links
- Interactive Virtual Tour (http://www.marseillenet.com)
- Marseille (http://www.provenceweb.fr/e/bouches/marseill/marseill.htm)
- Early history (http://www.ancientroute.com/cities/massilia.htm)
- Metro (http://www.urbanrail.net/eu/mar/marseil.htm)bg:Марсилия
ca:Marsella da:Marseille de:Marseille es:Marsella eo:Marsejlo fr:Marseille it:Marsiglia ja:マルセイユ la:Massilia nl:Marseille no:Marseille pl:Marsylia pt:Marselha ro:Marsilia fi:Marseille sv:Marseille