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Coordinates: 43°46′30″N 7°30′00″E / 43.775000°N 07.50°E / 43.775000; 07.50

Commune of Menton

Location
Menton is located in France
Menton
Administration
Country France
Region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
Department Alpes-Maritimes
Arrondissement Nice
Intercommunality Riviera française
Mayor Jean-Claude Guibal (UMP)
(2008–2014)
Statistics
Elevation 0–774 m (0–2,500 ft)
(avg. 16 m/52 ft)
Land area1 14.05 km2 (5.42 sq mi)
Population2 27,655  (2006)
 - Density 1,968 /km2 (5,100 /sq mi)
Miscellaneous
INSEE/Postal code 06083/ 06500
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g., students and military personnel) only counted once.

Menton (French pronunciation: [mɑ̃tɔ̃]; Occitan [meⁿˈtaⁿ], written Menton in classical norm or Mentan in Mistralian norm; Italian: Mentone) is a commune in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in south-eastern France.

Situated on the French Riviera, it is nicknamed la perle de la France ("The Pearl of France").[1]

Contents

History

View of old town and harbour

The Menton area has been inhabited since the paleolithic.[2] In Roman times, the via Julia Augusta, a road connecting Placentia (now Piacenza) with Arelates (now Arles) passed through Menton, running along the Rue Longue in the old town.[3]

The first major settlement occurred during the 11th century CE, when the Count of Ventimiglia constructed the Château de Puypin (Podium Pinum) on the Pépin hill, north and west of the modern town center. During the 13th century, the seigneury of Puypin fell to the Vento family of Genoa who built a new castle along the Roman road, now the site of the Vieux-Château cemetery, providing the core around which the current town grew. Menton was thus incorporated into the Republic of Genoa. The first mention of Menton dates from 21 July 1262, in the peace treaty between Charles of Anjou and Genoa. Its position on the border between the Angevin-ruled Provence and the Republic of Genoa, which at the time claimed Monaco as its western limit, made it a coveted location.

Menton -as part of Monaco- was the extreme western area of the Republic of Genoa (green color) in 1664

Acquired in 1346 by Charles Grimaldi, Lord of Monaco, Menton was ruled by the Princes of Monaco until the French Revolution. Annexed during the Revolution, Menton remained part of France through the First Empire. It belonged to the district of Sanremo in the department of Alpes-Maritimes, which at the time included Monaco and Sanremo.

In 1814, Menton was included in a reconstituted principality of Monaco which, after Napoleon's Hundred Days in 1815, became a protectorate of the King of Sardinia. The Princes of Monaco were obliged to do feudal homage (anachronistic at that late date) to the King for Menton, although not for Monaco itself.

Map of the territory of the "Free cities of Menton & Roquebrune in 1848[4]

In 1848, Menton, along with its neighbour Roquebrune, seceded from Monaco, due at least in part to a tax imposed on lemon exports.[5] They proclaimed themselves a "free city" during the 1848 revolutions related to the Italian Risorgimento, then two years later placed themselves under the protection of the Kingdom of Sardinia where they were administered by the House of Savoy for ten years.[6]

The Treaty of Turin concluded on 24 March 1860 between the Kingdom of Sardinia and Napoleon III's France called for the annexation of the County of Nice to France, subject to a plebiscite, as a reward for French assistance in Italy's war against Austria. The plebiscite, with universal adult male suffrage, was held on April 15 and 16, 1860 and resulted in an overwhelming vote in favor of annexation (833 for vs 54 against in Menton and Roquebrune),[7] despite complained of rigged elections from, among others, Nice born Italian nationalist Giuseppe Garibaldi. The county of Nice was thus annexed to France that June, and Napoleon III paid 4 million francs in compensation to the prince of Monaco, who renounced his rights in perpetuity on 2 February 1861.[7]

From the end of the 19th century, tourism became an important factor in Menton. The town was popular with English and Russian aristocrats who built many of the luxurious hotels, villas, and palaces which still grace Menton today. Many of these hotels and palaces were pressed into service as hospitals during World War I to allow injured troops to recuperate in a pleasant climate.

Menton was the only sizable settlement captured by Italy during its invasion of France in June 1940. Following the armistice of June 22, 1940, two thirds of the territory of the commune was annexed by Italy as "terra irredenta". The annexation lasted until 8 September 1943.

Although officially returned to Vichy France, Menton was in fact occupied by Nazi Germany until its liberation by American and Canadian troops of the First Special Service Force on 8 September 1944.[8]

The port and the old part of town.

Geography

Menton, nicknamed the Pearl of France, is located on the Mediterranean Sea at the Franco-Italian border, just across from the Liguran town of Ventimiglia. It boasts a warm micro-climate favorable to lemon, tangerine, and orange groves whence one of the town's symbols, the lemon.

The fishing industry was devastated in the 1980s and 1990s when the "killer algae" Caulerpa taxifolia (a non-native Asian tropical green algae first discovered in the Mediterranean Sea adjacent to the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco in 1984) spread throughout the coastal sea floor, greatly reducing local fish populations.

Population

Musée Jean Cocteau
Population of Menton (Source : INSEE[9])
1962 1968 1975 1982 1990 1999 2006
19,915 25,054 25 143 25,086 29,141 28,812 27,655
Population without double counting

Townscape

Menton from the sea

Menton is famous for its gardens, including the Jardin Serre de la Madone, the Jardin botanique exotique de Menton ("Le Val Rahmeh"), the Fontana Rosa, and the Maria Serena garden. Le Val Rahmeh was established in 1905 by Englishman Sir Percy Radcliffe, the first owner of the gardens, and named for his wife. Villa Fontana Rosa was built in 1922 by Blasco Ibáñez, a Spanish novelist, and the gardens of the villa are now open to the public.

  • The baroque basilica of Saint-Michel-Archange, with its bell-tower, was built in 1619 by the Genoese architect Lorenzo Lavagna.
  • The Musée Jean Cocteau is located in the Bastion of the port of Menton. The bastion, built overwater in 1636 as an advance defense for the port by the Princes of Monaco, is now located at the shoreline.
  • The wedding room at the Mairie (town hall) was painted in the 1950s by Jean Cocteau, transforming it into a giant work of art.
  • Menton is home to at least half a dozen beaches

Mentonasc language

The Mentonasc dialect is currently spoken by about 10% of the population in Menton, Roquebrune, and the surrounding villages. It is taught within the French educational system, as a variety of Niçard (i.e. Provençal and Occitan). However, in nineteenth century linguistic descriptions,[10] as well as in contemporary linguistic scholarship[11][12][13] Mentonasc is described as an intermediate between Niçard and the Intemelio dialect of Ligurian. Some scholars insist that Mentonasc is, at it base, a Ligurian dialect, with French influences coming only later,[14] and that its supposed misclassification as a variety of Provençal has essentially political motives[15].

Origin of the name

"Menton" is the French word for "chin". According to the French geographer Ernest Nègre, the name Menton comes from the Roman name Mento.[16] However, it is possible that the name of the city comes from Mons Ottonis (reconstituted) from the name of Otton II, the Count of Ventimiglia from 1162-1200.[17] In Mentonasc, the city's name is Mentan (pronounced [mẽˈtã]), and in Italian Mentone ([menˈtone]).

An inhabitant of Menton, un mentonnais or un mentonasque in French, would be O mentonasc in the local dialect.

View of the port of Menton

Annual town events

The Lemon Festival takes place every February. The festival follows a given theme each year; past themes include Viva España, Disney, Neverland, and India. The festival lasts a few days, with different bands passing through Menton's streets on foot or on truck trailers. The Casino Gardens in the centre of town are decorated in the theme of the festival, using lemons to cover the exhibits, and huge temporary statues are built and covered with citrus fruit.

The Casino Gardens are also the location for Menton's Christmas Festival.

The Menton Classical Musical Festival is also held every year in the centre of the old town.

Notable people

Notables who were born, lived, or died in Menton:

  • Jérôme Alonzo (1972-), French first division football goalkeeper, born in Menton 20 November 1972.
  • Richard Anconina (1953-), French actor. Before his film career, he worked for several years at a holiday club for seniors in Menton.
  • Gérald Ariano (1974-), French television presenter, born in Menton.
  • Ferdinand Bac (1859-1952), French illustrator, lithographer, and writer, undertook the development of the gardens of the villa des Colombières in Menton. He transformed this old run-down building into a sumptuous residence in the midst of gardens where each bed takes its inspiration from a Mediterranean country.
  • Aubrey Vincent Beardsley (21 August 1872 – 16 March 1898), English illustrator and author.
  • Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) French artist, spent much time in Menton over the years. A memorial and museum dedicated to him are in Menton, as is the wedding room in the town hall decorated with his work.
  • Olivier Echouafni (1972-), French first division football midfielder, born in Menton 13 September 1972.
  • William Webb Ellis (1806-1872), the inventor of Rugby, lived in Menton at the end of his life and is buried in the old cemetery.
  • Blasco Ibanez (1867-1928), Spanish author who, at the end of his life, lived in his estate, Fontana Rosa, in Menton.
  • Joseph Joffo (1931-), French author, lived temporarily in Menton during World War II
  • Graham Sutherland (24 August 1903 - 17 February 1980), English artist.
  • Cédric Varrault (1980-), French first division football defender, began his career with the Menton football club.

International relations

Twin towns — Sister cities

Menton is twinned with:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Menton, "perle de la France"" (in French). Office de Tourisme de Menton. http://www.menton.fr/article.php3?id_article=809.  
  2. ^ Émile Rivière, Découverte d'un Squelette Humain de l'Époque Paléolithique Dans les Cavernes des Baoussé-Rousse dites Grottes de Menton (Discovery of a Human Skeleton from the Paleolithic in the Caverns of Baoussé-Rousse also known as the Grottes de Menton), (J.-B. Baillière et Fils, Paris, 1873) (in French)
  3. ^ La rue Longue (Official site of the town of Menton, accessed April 2009) (in French)
  4. ^ Ermanno Amicucci. Nizza e l'Italia. Mondadori editore. Milano, 1939.
  5. ^ Menton on the French Riviera (accessed April 2009)
  6. ^ Ermanno Amicucci. Nizza e l'Italia. p 58-61
  7. ^ a b Monaco, Menton, and Roquebrune
  8. ^ La libération de Menton (The Liberation of Menton, Official site of the town of Menton, Accessed April 2009) (in French)
  9. ^ Menton at the INSEE (French National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies) (in French)
  10. ^ James Bruny Andrews, Il dialetto di Mentone, in quanto egli tramezzi ideologicamente tra il provenzale e il ligure (The dialect of Menton, in which it is ideologically intermediate between Provençal and Ligurian) in Archivio Glottologico Italiano XII, 1890/92, pp. 97-106. (in English)
  11. ^ J.-P. Dalbera, Interférences entre provençal et ligurien dans la génèse du système morphologique mentonnais (Interferences between Provençal and Ligurian in the genesis of the Mentonnais morphological system) in Bulletin du Centre de romanistique et de latinité tardive 4-5, Nice, 1989, pp. 89-97.
  12. ^ W. Forner L'Intemelia linguistica, in Intemelion 1, Sanremo, 1995, pp. 67-82. (in Italian)
  13. ^ Le mentonnais entre toutes les chaises ? in Lexique Français-Mentonnais (Caserio & al. 2001) (in French)
  14. ^ Werner Forner.À propos du ligurien intémélien - La côte, l'arrière-pays, Travaux du Cercle linguistique de Nice, 7-8, 1986, pp. 29-62.
  15. ^ F. Toso, Il brigasco e l'olivettese tra classificazione scientifica e manipolazioni politico-amministrative Intermelion #14 p. 103, 2008 (in Italian)
  16. ^ Ernest Nègre, General Toponym of France : Etymology of 35,000 place names, Geneva : Librairie Droz, 1990. Volume I : Pre-Celtic, Celtic, and Roman names, § 11 118, p 664 (in French).
  17. ^ (French)Fondation de Menton

External links


Travel guide

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikitravel

Menton - Old town viewed from port
Menton - Old town viewed from port

Menton is the "The Lemon Festival Capital of the World", located very close to the border of France and Italy and in many ways is more Italian than French. It has its own microclimate, generally milder than the rest of the French Riviera, and became in the late Nineteenth Century a place where Northern Europeans with TB came to either regain their health or to die. As a result its cemetery is filled with the graves of notable Englishmen, Germans, Russians. The old town is largely pedestrianised which adds to the charm of this sedate resort.

  • A8 Exit Menton. Follow signs for Centre Ville.
  • Bas Corniche from Monaco or Italy (Ventimiglia)
  • Train from Monaco/Nice or Ventimiglia

Menton has a curious one way system, it is probably a good idea to park near the port and not attempt to drive anywhere else. Although the climb up to the cemeteries is steep on foot it is considerably better than attempting to drive it.

Get around

Menton is reasonably compact and most points of interest are within walking distance.

Note that attractions such as the cemeteries and the churches are up steep hills and many steps however the views that can be gained are well worth the effort.

Being so close to the Italian border, one can literally walk to Italy. This is definitely more of a novelty than of use and trips in to Italy to the nearby towns or further afield should be made either by rail or by road.

  • Jean Cocteau Museum In a bastion near the port, this small museum displays drawings, ceramics, tapestries and a large mosaic by the artist.
  • Salle des Marriages In the town hall, the civic wedding hall is decorated completely in murals by Jean Cocteau.
  • The charming old town is compact and largely pedestrianised.
  • Several impressive gardens dotted through the town including those at Garavan (Olive trees in Parc du Pian, Jardin Exotique, Villa Fontana Rosa).
  • Casino and the magnificent hotels Royal Westminster and Ambassadeurs.
  • Cimetière du Vieux Chateau Russian Orthodox chapel, grave of William Webb Ellis - founder of Rugby football, view over town.
  • The perched villages inland (Ste Agnes and Gorbio).
  • The Mare Nostrum brewery in Castillon.
  • Fête du Citron There's a lemon party and you're invited! Lemon-related festivities over several days in February.
  • Citrus products
  • Souvenirs

Eat

There are numerous good restaurants in the Old Town and down towards the port, which offer good value for money. Expect to pay €15-€20 for the cheapest three course meal set menu. Higher priced menus are, of course, also available.

  • Le Balico Place aux Herbes in the Old Town tel: 04 93 41 66 99. Closed Tuesday(?). Local Menton Cuisine - menus €20-€50 plus à la carte.
  • Le Nautique 27 Quai de Monléon by the port tel: 04 93 35 78 74. Closed Sunday evening and all day Monday(?). Seafood speciality - menus €20-€50 plus à la carte.

Drink

Behind Menton in the village of Castillon is the "Mare Nostrum" microbrewery. A rather yuppie sort of place but the beer is very good.

  • Hotel Booking Menton - Tourist office of Menton - Official Website, 8 avenue Boyer, +33 4 92 41 76 76, [1]. checkin: 2PM.   edit
  • Best Western Hotel Prince De Galles, 4 Avenue General De Gaulle, 33 4 93282121 (fax: 33 4 93359291), [2]. checkin: 4PM; checkout: 12PM.  edit
  • Royal Westminster, 1510 promenade du Soleil. checkin: 3PM; checkout: 12PM.  edit
  • Résidence Maeva Les Citronniers, [4]. Located in the heart of the town centre and 500 m from the old town and old harbour. Air-conditioned, self-catering apartments. 300 m from the beach.  edit
  • Hotel Mediterranee, 5 Rue de la Republique, [5]. checkout: 12pm.  edit Located between the old town of and the newer shopping area, and a short walk from the train station. Rooms are air conditioned and the hotel has a superb roof-top terrace for sunseekers during the day or for those requiring a much needed refreshing beverage!
  • Rent the Riviera. Local apartment rental by owner. www.rent-the-riviera.com  edit

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Simple English

Menton is a commune. It is found in the region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur in the Alpes-Maritimes department in the south of France.








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