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词条 Reims
释义

  1. Administration

  2. History

  3. Sights

     Streets and squares  Gallo-Roman antiquities  Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Reims  Palace of Tau  Saint Remi Basilica  Forts  Monument to the Black Army of Reims  Other buildings 

  4. Transport

  5. Wine

  6. Climate

  7. Sport

  8. Notable residents

  9. Higher education

  10. International relations

     Twin towns – sister cities 

  11. See also

  12. References

  13. Bibliography

  14. External links

{{Redirect|Rheims|other uses|Rheims (disambiguation)}}{{Other uses}}{{For|the island in northern Germany|Riems}}{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2013}}{{More footnotes|date=February 2008}}{{Infobox French commune
|name = Reims
|commune status = Subprefecture and commune
|image = Hôtel de Ville de Reims, Southeast View 20140306 1.jpg
|caption = City hall (hôtel de ville)
|image coat of arms = Grandes Armes de Reims.svg
|image flag = Flag of Rheims.svg
|region = Grand Est
|department = Marne
|arrondissement = Reims
|canton = Reims-1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9
|INSEE = 51454
|postal code = 51100
|mayor = Arnaud Robinet
|party = LR
|term = 2014–2019
|intercommunality = CU Grand Reims
|coordinates = {{coord|49.2628|4.0347|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
|elevation m =
|elevation min m = 80
|elevation max m = 135
|area km2 = 46.9
|population = 186971
|population date = 2014
}}

Reims ({{IPAc-en|r|iː|m|z}}; also spelled Rheims; {{IPA-fr|ʁɛ̃s|lang}}), a city in the Grand Est region of France, lies {{convert|129|km|mi|abbr=on}} east-northeast of Paris. The 2013 census recorded 182,592 inhabitants (Rémoises (feminine) and Rémois (masculine)) in the city of Reims proper (the commune), and 317,611 inhabitants in the metropolitan area (aire urbaine). Its primary river, the Vesle, is a tributary of the Aisne.

Founded by the Gauls, it became a major city during the period of the Roman Empire.[1] Reims played a prominent ceremonial role in French monarchical history as the traditional site of the crowning of the kings of France. The Cathedral of Reims (damaged during the First World War but restored since) housed the Holy Ampulla (Sainte Ampoule) containing the Saint Chrême (chrism), allegedly brought by a white dove (the Holy Spirit) at the baptism of Clovis in 496. It was used for the anointing, the most important part of the coronation of French kings.

Administration

Reims functions as a subprefecture of the department of Marne,[2] in the administrative region of Grand Est. Although Reims is by far the largest commune in its department, Châlons-en-Champagne is the prefecture.

History

{{see also|Timeline of Reims}}{{see also|Durocortorum}}{{For|the ecclesiastical history|Archbishopric of Reims}}

Before the Roman conquest of northern Gaul, Reims, founded circa 80 BC as *Durocorteron ("round fortress"; in Latin: Durocortōrum), served as the capital of the tribe of the Remi — whose name the town would subsequently echo. In the course of Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul (58–51 BC), the Remi allied themselves with the Romans, and by their fidelity throughout the various Gallic insurrections secured the special favour of the imperial power.[2] At its height in Roman times the city had a population in the range of 30,000 - 50,000 or perhaps up to 100,000.[2]

Christianity had become established in the city by 260, at which period Saint Sixtus of Reims founded the bishopric of Reims. The consul Jovinus, an influential supporter of the new faith, repelled the Alamanni who invaded Champagne in 336; but the Vandals captured the city in 406 and slew Bishop Nicasius;[2] and in 451 Attila the Hun put Reims to fire and sword.

In 496 – ten years after Clovis, King of the Salian Franks, won his victory at Soissons (486) — Remigius, the bishop of Reims, baptized him using the oil of the sacred phial – purportedly brought from heaven by a dove for the baptism of Clovis and subsequently preserved in the Abbey of Saint-Remi.[2] For centuries the events at the crowning of Clovis I became a symbol used by the monarchy to claim the divine right to rule.

Meetings of Pope Stephen II (752–757) with Pepin the Short, and of Pope Leo III (795–816) with Charlemagne (died 814), took place at Reims; and here Pope Stephen IV crowned Louis the Debonnaire in 816. King Louis IV gave the city and countship of Reims to the archbishop Artaldus in 940. King Louis VII (reigned 1137–1180) gave the title of duke and peer to William of Champagne, archbishop from 1176 to 1202, and the archbishops of Reims took precedence over the other ecclesiastical peers of the realm.[2]

By the 10th century Reims had become a centre of intellectual culture. Archbishop Adalberon (in office 969 to 988), seconded by the monk Gerbert (afterwards (from 999 to 1003) Pope Silvester II), founded schools which taught the classical "liberal arts". (Adalberon also played a leading role in the dynastic revolution which elevated the Capetian dynasty in the place of the Carolingians.)[2]

The archbishops held the important prerogative of the consecration of the kings of France – a privilege which they exercised (except in a few cases) from the time of Philippe II Augustus (anointed 1179, reigned 1180–1223) to that of Charles X (anointed 1825). Louis VII granted the city a communal charter in 1139. The Treaty of Troyes (1420) ceded it to the English, who had made a futile attempt to take it by siege in 1360; but French patriots expelled them on the approach of Joan of Arc, who in 1429 had Charles VII consecrated in the cathedral. Louis XI cruelly suppressed a revolt at Reims, caused in 1461 by the salt tax. During the French Wars of Religion the city sided with the Catholic League (1585), but submitted to King Henri IV after the battle of Ivry (1590).[2]

In the invasions of the War of the Sixth Coalition in 1814, anti-Napoleonic allied armies captured and re-captured Reims; in 1870–1871, during the Franco-Prussian War, the victorious Germans made it the seat of a governor-general and impoverished it with heavy requisitions.[2]

In August 1909 Reims hosted the first international aviation meet, the Grande Semaine d'Aviation de la Champagne. Major aviation personages such as Glenn Curtiss, Louis Blériot and Louis Paulhan participated.

Hostilities in World War I greatly damaged the city. German bombardment and a subsequent fire in 1914 did severe damage to the cathedral. The ruined cathedral became one of the central images of anti-German propaganda produced in France during the war, which presented it, along with the ruins of the Cloth Hall at Ypres and the University Library in Louvain, as evidence that German aggression targeted cultural landmarks of European civilization.

From the end of World War I to the {{as of | 2009 | alt = present day}} an international effort to restore the cathedral from the ruins has continued. The Palace of Tau, St Jacques Church and the Abbey of St Remi also were protected{{By whom|date= September 2009}} and restored. The collection of preserved buildings and Roman ruins remains monumentally impressive.

During World War II the city suffered additional damage. But in Reims, at 2:41 on the morning of 7 May 1945, General Eisenhower and the Allies received the unconditional surrender of the German Wehrmacht. General Alfred Jodl, German Chief-of-Staff, signed the surrender at the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) as the representative for German President Karl Dönitz.

The British statesman Leslie Hore-Belisha died of a cerebral haemorrhage while making a speech at the Reims hôtel de ville (city hall) in February 1957.

Sights

Streets and squares

The principal squares of Reims include the Place Royale, with a statue of Louis XV, and the Place Cardinal-Luçon, with an equestrian statue of Joan of Arc. The Rue de Vesle, the main commercial street (continued under other names), traverses the city from southwest to northeast, passing through the Place Royale.[2] Restaurants and bars are concentrated around Place Drouet d'Erlon in the city centre.

Gallo-Roman antiquities

The oldest monument in Reims, the Porte de Mars ("Mars Gate", so called from a temple to Mars in the neighbourhood), a triumphal arch 108 feet in length by 43 in height, consists of three archways flanked by columns. Popular tradition tells that the Remi erected it in honour of Augustus when Agrippa made the great roads terminating at the city, but it probably belongs to the 3rd or 4th century. The Mars Gate was one of 4 Roman gates to the city walls, which were restored{{By whom|date=November 2009}} at the time of the Norman Invasion of northern France in the 9th century. In its vicinity a curious mosaic, measuring 36 feet by 26, with thirty-five medallions representing animals and gladiators, was discovered in 1860.[2]

Note too the Gallo-Roman sarcophagus, allegedly that of the 4th-century consul Jovinus, preserved in the archaeological museum in the cloister of the abbey of Saint-Remi.[2]

Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Reims

{{Main|Notre-Dame de Reims}}

Many people know Reims for its cathedral, Notre-Dame de Reims, formerly the place of coronation of the kings of France. The cathedral became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991, along with the former Abbey of Saint-Remi and the Palace of Tau.

Palace of Tau

{{Main|Palace of Tau}}

The archiepiscopal palace, built between 1498 and 1509, and in part rebuilt in 1675, served as the residence of the kings of France on the occasion of their coronations. The salon (salle du Tau), where the royal banquet took place, has an immense stone chimney that dates from the 15th century. The chapel of the archiepiscopal palace consists of two storeys, of which the upper still ({{as of | 2009 | lc = on}}) serves as a place of worship. Both the chapel and the salle du Tau have decorative tapestries of the 17th century, known as the Perpersack tapestries, after the Flemish weaver who executed them.[2] The palace opened to the public in 1972 as a museum containing such exhibits as statues formerly displayed by the cathedral, treasures of the cathedral from past centuries, and royal attire from coronations of French kings.

Saint Remi Basilica

Saint Remi Basilica, about a mile from the Cathedral of Notre Dame of Reims, takes its name from the fifth-century Saint Remi, revered as the patron saint of the inhabitants of Reims for more than fifteen centuries. The basilica approaches the cathedral in size. Adjacent to the basilica stands an important abbey, formerly known as the Royal Abbey of St Remi. The abbey sought to trace its heritage back to St Remi, while the present abbey building dates back to the 17th and 18th centuries.

The Saint Remi Basilica dates from the 11th, 12th, 13th and 15th centuries. Most of the construction of the church finished in the 11th century, with additions made later. The nave and transepts, Gothic in style, date mainly from the earliest, the façade of the south transept from the latest of those periods, the choir and apse chapels from the 12th and 13th centuries.[2] The 17th and 19th centuries saw further additions. The building suffered greatly in World War I, and the meticulous restoration work of architect {{Interlanguage link multi|Henri Deneux|fr}} rebuilt it from its ruins over the following 40 years. {{As of | 2009}} it remains the seat of an active Catholic parish holding regular worship services and welcoming pilgrims. It has been classified as an historical monument since 1841 and is one of the pinnacles of the history of art and of the history of France.

Several royal and archepiscopal figures lie buried in the basilica, but in unidentified graves. They include:

  • Carloman King of the Franks (751–771; reigned 768–771), the brother of Charlemagne
  • Queen Frederonne (died 917), wife of Charles III (879–929)
  • Gerberga of Saxony (910–984), wife of Louis IV (King of Western Francia from 936 to 954)
  • Henri d'Orléans (died about 1653)
  • Lothair I, (941–986), King of Western Francia from 954 to 986
  • Louis IV (King of Western Francia from 936 to 954)

The public can visit the abbey building, {{as of | 2008 | alt = now}} the Saint-Remi Museum. The abbey closed in the wake of the French Revolution (the government had all French monasteries dissolved in February 1790). The museum exhibits include tapestries from the 16th century donated by the archbishop Robert de Lenoncourt (uncle of the cardinal of the same name), marble capitals from the fourth century AD, furniture, jewellery, pottery, weapons and glasswork from the sixth to eighth centuries, medieval sculpture, the façade of the 13th-century musicians' House, remnants from an earlier abbey building, and also exhibits of Gallo-Roman arts and crafts and a room of pottery, jewellery and weapons from Gallic civilization, as well as an exhibit of items from the Palaeolithic to the Neolithic periods.

Another section of the museum features a permanent military exhibition.

Forts

In 1874 the construction of a chain of detached forts started in the vicinity, the French Army having selected Reims as one of the chief defences of the northern approaches to Paris. Atop the ridge of St Thierry stands a fort of the same name, which with the neighbouring work of Chenay closes the west side of the place. To the north the hill of Brimont has three works guarding the Laon railway and the Aisne canal. Farther east, on the old Roman road, stands the Fort de Fresnes. Due east, the hills of Arnay are crowned with five large and important works which cover the approaches from the upper Aisne. Fort de la Pompelle, which hosts a World War I museum featuring a rich collection of German uniforms, and Montbré close the southeast side, and the Falaise hills on the southwest are open and unguarded. The perimeter of the defences measures just under 22 miles, and the forts are at a mean distance of {{Convert|6|mi|km|0}} from the centre of the city.[2]

Monument to the Black Army of Reims

The original monument was erected in 1924 where the Boulevard Henry Vasnier meets the Avenue du Général Giraud. The first stone was placed by André Maginot, Minister of War on 29 October 1922. This ceremony was also addressed by Blaise Diagne, the Senegalese political leader. In July 1924 the monument was inaugurated with a Military and Sports fete presided over by Édouard Daladier, the Minister of the colonies. General Louis Archinard was the president of the committee that supervised the erection of the monument, highlighting the role of African troops of the 1st Colonial Infantry Corps in the defense of Reims from the German Army in 1918. They were particularly renowned for their tenacious defence of Fort de la Pompelle. 10,000 people attended the fete which was held immediately following the inauguration. The original monument, consisting of five figures, was a replica of a similar monument erected in Bamako, Mali in January 1924. The monument was dismantled during the German occupation in September 1940. In September 1958, on the occasion of the fortieth anniversary of the Defence of Reims, a new monument was started. This was completed in time for a second inauguration ceremony on 6 October 1963, with Pierre Messmer, Minister of Armies, Jean Sainteny, Minister of veterans, Jacques Foccart, secretary general of the Communauté et les affaires africaines et malgaches, and General Georges Catroux, grand chancellor of the Légion d'honneur. In 2008, on the occasion of the ninetieth anniversary of the defence of Reims, a major ceremony was held in remembrance of the Black Army of Reims, attended by Jean-Marie Bockel, Rama Yade and Adeline Hazan.[3]

Other buildings

{{see also|Château de Condé}}

The Church of St Jacques dates from the 13th to the 16th centuries. A few blocks from the cathedral, it stands {{as of | 2009 | lc = on}} in a neighborhood of shopping and restaurants. What remains of the Abbey of St. Denis has become a Fine Arts Museum. The old College of the Jesuits also survives as a museum. The churches of St Maurice (partly rebuilt in 1867), St André,[2] and St Thomas (erected from 1847 to 1853, under the patronage of Cardinal Gousset, now buried within its walls[2]) also draw tourists.

The Temple protestant de Reims was designed by Charles Letrosne in a flamboyant neo-Gothic style. Originally the walls were lavishly decorated in Art Deco style by Gustave Louis Jaulmes, but in 1973 the walls were painted white, giving an austere appearance.[4]

The Foujita Chapel (1966), designed and decorated by the Japanese School of Paris artist Tsuguharu Foujita, became famed for its frescos. It was listed as an historic monument in 1992.[5]

The city hall (hôtel de ville), erected in the 17th century and enlarged in the 19th, features a pediment with an equestrian statue of Louis XIII (reigned 1610 to 1643).[6]

The Surrender Museum is the building in which on 7 May 1945, General Eisenhower and the Allies received the unconditional surrender of the German Wehrmacht.

The Carnegie library, the former public library built with money donated by Andrew Carnegie to the city of Reims after World War I, is a remarkable example of Art Deco in France.

Transport

Reims is served by two main railway stations: Gare de Reims in the city centre, the hub for regional transport, and the new Gare de Champagne-Ardenne TGV {{convert|5|km|0|abbr=off}} southwest of the city with high-speed rail connections to Paris, Metz, Nancy and Strasbourg. The motorways A4 (Paris-Strasbourg), A26 (Calais-Langres) and A34 intersect near Reims.

Public transport within the city consists of buses and a tramway, the latter opened in 2011.

Wine

Reims, along with Épernay and Ay, functions as one of the centres of champagne production. Many of the largest champagne-producing houses, known as les grandes marques, have their headquarters in Reims, and most open for tasting and tours. Champagne ages in the many caves and tunnels under Reims, which form a sort of maze below the city. Carved from chalk, some of these passages date back to Roman times.

Climate

{{Weather box
|width = auto
|location= Reims (1961–1990)
|metric first= Y
|single line= Y
|Jan record high C = 16.6
|Feb record high C = 21.6
|Mar record high C = 24.0
|Apr record high C = 29.4
|May record high C = 31.7
|Jun record high C = 35.4
|Jul record high C = 37.7
|Aug record high C = 37.3
|Sep record high C = 33.0
|Oct record high C = 27.5
|Nov record high C = 20.0
|Dec record high C = 16.7
|year record high C = 37.7
|Jan high C = 4.9
|Feb high C = 6.9
|Mar high C = 10.2
|Apr high C = 13.9
|May high C = 18.1
|Jun high C = 21.4
|Jul high C = 23.8
|Aug high C = 23.4
|Sep high C = 20.3
|Oct high C = 15.4
|Nov high C = 9.2
|Dec high C = 5.9
|year high C = 14.5
|Jan mean C = 2.3
|Feb mean C = 3.4
|Mar mean C = 6.0
|Apr mean C = 8.9
|May mean C = 12.7
|Jun mean C = 15.9
|Jul mean C = 17.9
|Aug mean C = 17.7
|Sep mean C = 14.9
|Oct mean C = 11.0
|Nov mean C = 6.0
|Dec mean C = 3.2
|year mean C = 10.0
|Jan low C = -0.4
|Feb low C = -0.1
|Mar low C = 1.8
|Apr low C = 3.8
|May low C = 7.3
|Jun low C = 10.4
|Jul low C = 12.0
|Aug low C = 11.9
|Sep low C = 9.5
|Oct low C = 6.6
|Nov low C = 2.8
|Dec low C = 0.5
|year low C = 5.5
|Jan record low C = -22.3
|Feb record low C = -19.9
|Mar record low C = -10.8
|Apr record low C = -5.5
|May record low C = -2.1
|Jun record low C = -0.4
|Jul record low C = 3.1
|Aug record low C = 2.0
|Sep record low C = -0.7
|Oct record low C = -6.6
|Nov record low C = -11.5
|Dec record low C = -19.6
|year record low C = -22.3
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 43.6
|Feb precipitation mm = 42.2
|Mar precipitation mm = 50.8
|Apr precipitation mm = 43.4
|May precipitation mm = 59.8
|Jun precipitation mm = 58.8
|Jul precipitation mm = 52.2
|Aug precipitation mm = 49.4
|Sep precipitation mm = 49.5
|Oct precipitation mm = 51.5
|Nov precipitation mm = 53.1
|Dec precipitation mm = 49.8
|year precipitation mm = 604.1
|Jan humidity = 88
|Feb humidity = 84
|Mar humidity = 80
|Apr humidity = 77
|May humidity = 78
|Jun humidity = 78
|Jul humidity = 76
|Aug humidity = 77
|Sep humidity = 81
|Oct humidity = 86
|Nov humidity = 88
|Dec humidity = 88
|year humidity = 81.8
|unit precipitation days = 1.0 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 10.7
|Feb precipitation days = 9.2
|Mar precipitation days = 10.9
|Apr precipitation days = 9.8
|May precipitation days = 9.9
|Jun precipitation days = 9.3
|Jul precipitation days = 7.8
|Aug precipitation days = 7.9
|Sep precipitation days = 8.2
|Oct precipitation days = 8.9
|Nov precipitation days = 10.3
|Dec precipitation days = 10.3
|year precipitation days = 113.2
|Jan snow days = 5.6
|Feb snow days = 4.9
|Mar snow days = 3.4
|Apr snow days = 1.4
|May snow days = 0.1
|Jun snow days = 0.0
|Jul snow days = 0.0
|Aug snow days = 0.0
|Sep snow days = 0.0
|Oct snow days = 0.0
|Nov snow days = 2.0
|Dec snow days = 3.9
|year snow days = 21.3
|Jan sun = 50.3
|Feb sun = 86.1
|Mar sun = 129.4
|Apr sun = 171.7
|May sun = 206.9
|Jun sun = 220.0
|Jul sun = 235.0
|Aug sun = 216.3
|Sep sun = 170.6
|Oct sun = 121.6
|Nov sun = 71.9
|Dec sun = 49.0
|year sun = 1728.8
|source 1 = Infoclimat.fr[7]
|date= December 2015
}}

Sport

Between 1925 and 1969 Reims hosted the Grand Prix de la Marne automobile race at the circuit of Reims-Gueux. The French Grand Prix took place here 14 times between 1938 and 1966.

{{As of | 2016}} the football club Stade Reims, based in the city, competed in the Ligue 1, the first-highest tier of French football. Stade Reims became the outstanding team of France in the 1950s and early 1960s and reached the final of the European Cup of Champions twice in that era.

In October 2018, the city hosted the second Teqball World Cup.

The city has hosted the Reims Marathon since 1984.

Notable residents

Those born in Reims include:

  • Adolphe d'Archiac (1802–1868), geologist and paleontologist
  • Jean Baudrillard (1929–2007), cultural theorist and philosopher
  • Nicolas Bergier (1567-1623), scholar of Roman roads
  • Roger Caillois (1913–1978), intellectual
  • Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619–1683), French minister of finance from 1665 to 1683 during the reign of King Louis XIV
  • {{Interlanguage link multi|Eugène Courmeaux|fr}} (1817–1902), librarian of Reims, fervent republican
  • Jean-Baptiste Drouet, Count d'Erlon (1765–1844), marshal of France and a soldier in Napoleon's army
  • Paul Fort (1872–1960), poet
  • Nicolas Eugène Géruzez (1799–1865), critic
  • Pauline Ferrand-Prévot (born 1992), world champion cyclist
  • Nicolas de Grigny (1672–1703), organist and composer
  • Maurice Halbwachs (1877–1945), philosopher and sociologist
  • Jean Lévesque de Burigny (1692-1785), historian
  • Marie-Claire Jamet (born 1933), classical harpist
  • Guillaume de Machaut (1300–1377), composer and poet (Machaut was most likely born in Reims or nearby, and spent most of his adult life there)[8]
  • Henri Marteau (1874–1934), violinist and composer
  • Merolilan of Rheims, Irish cleric
  • Olivier Métra (1830–1889), composer, conductor
  • Maurice Pézard (1876–1923), archaeologist and assyriologist
  • Robert Pires (born 1973), World Cup winner, footballer for Arsenal and for Villarreal CF
  • Patrick Poivre d'Arvor (born 1947), television journalist and writer
  • Jean-Baptiste de la Salle (1651–1719), Catholic saint, teacher and educational reformer
  • Jules de Saint-Pol (1810-1855), general
  • Émile Senart (1847–1928), indologist
  • Adeline Wuillème (born 8 December 1975), foil fencer

Higher education

The URCA (University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne|Université de Reims Champagne-Ardenne) was created in 1548. This multidisciplinary university develops innovative, fundamental and applied research. It provides more than 18 000 students in Reims (22 000 in Champagne-Ardenne) with a wide initial undergraduate studies program which corresponds to society's needs in all domains of the knowledge. The university also accompanies independent or company backed students in continuing professional development training.

The Institut d'Etudes politiques de Paris, the leading French university in social and political sciences, also known as Sciences Po, opened a new campus in the {{Interlanguage link multi|Collège des Jésuites de Reims|fr}} in 2010. This Euro-American campus[9] will welcome more than 1500 students in 2015. In 2012 the first Reims Model United Nations was launched, which gathered 200 international students from all the Sciences Po campuses. Daniel Rondeau, the ambassador of France to UNESCO and a French writer, is the patron of the event. NEOMA Business School (former Reims Management School) is also one of the main schools in Reims.

International relations

{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in France}}

Twin towns – sister cities

Reims is twinned with:

  • {{Coat of arms|Florence}}, Italy (1954)
  • {{Coat of arms|Brazzaville}}, Republic of the Congo (1961)
  • Canterbury, United Kingdom (1962)[10][11]
  • {{Coat of arms|Salzburg}}, Austria (1964)
  • {{Coat of arms|Aachen}}, Germany (1967)[12][13]
  • Arlington County, Virginia, United States (2005)
  • Kutná Hora, Czech Republic (2008)
  • Nagoya, Japan (2017)

See also

  • Archbishop of Reims
  • Battle of Reims
  • Biscuit rose de Reims
  • Champagne (province)
  • Champagne
  • Champagne (wine region)
  • Champagne Riots
  • French wine
  • Reims Aviation (aircraft-maker)

References

1. ^"Reims," entry in Nouveau petit Larousse, 1971, p. 1638.
2. ^{{cite book|title= An Historical Geography of France|author1= de Planhol, X.|author2= Claval, P.|date= 1994|publisher= Cambridge University Press|isbn= 9780521322089|url= https://books.google.dk/books?id=C19glZh7zfoC|page= 47|accessdate= 10 October 2014}}
3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.crdp-reims.fr/memoire/lieux/1GM_CA/monuments/01armeenoire.htm#reimsbamako |title=Le monument à l'Armée noire de Reims |language=French |accessdate=11 November 2010 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://archive.is/20120724004208/http://www.crdp-reims.fr/memoire/lieux/1GM_CA/monuments/01armeenoire.htm#reimsbamako |archivedate=24 July 2012 |df=dmy-all }}
4. ^{{cite web|ref=harv|url=http://www.epu-reimsepernay.org/45.html |last=Guttinger|first=Philippe |title=Le temple protestant de Reims|year=2015 |accessdate=4 July 2015}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.culture.gouv.fr/public/mistral/merimee_fr?ACTION=RETROUVER&FIELD_1=cmer1&VALUE_1=reims&FIELD_2=cmer4&VALUE_2=chapelle&FIELD_3=cmer5&VALUE_3=&FIELD_4=AUTR&VALUE_4=&FIELD_5=TOUT&VALUE_5=&FIELD_6=titre%20courant&VALUE_6=&FIELD_7=date%20protection&VALUE_7=&FIELD_8=DOSURLP&VALUE_8=%20&NUMBER=1&GRP=0&REQ=%28%28reims%29%20%3aLOCA%2cPLOC%2cINSEE%20%20ET%20%20%28%28chapelle%29%20%3aDENO%2cPARN%2cREMA%2cACTU%2cPDEN%2cMHPP%20%29%29&USRNAME=nobody&USRPWD=4%24%2534P&SPEC=9&SYN=1&IMLY=&MAX1=1&MAX2=100&MAX3=100&DOM=Tous |title=French Culture Ministry: listing of the Foujita chapel |publisher=culture.gouv.fr|accessdate=16 August 2015}}
6. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 {{EB1911|wstitle=Reims|inline=1}}
7. ^{{cite web| url = http://www.infoclimat.fr/climatologie-07070-reims-champagne.html| title = Normes et records 1961-1990: Reims-Champagne (51) - altitude 91m| language = French| publisher = Infoclimat| accessdate = December 31, 2015}}
8. ^Oxford Music Online
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://college.sciences-po.fr/sitereims/|title=Welcome | Sciences Po - College Universitaire de Reims - Campus Euro-Américain|publisher=college.sciences-po.fr|accessdate=10 October 2014}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.completefrance.com/language-culture/twin-towns|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130705094933/http://www.completefrance.com/language-culture/twin-towns|title=British towns twinned with French towns [via WaybackMachine.com]|accessdate=20 July 2013|archivedate=5 July 2013|work=Archant Community Media Ltd}}
11. ^[https://archive.is/20120721071647/http://www.canterbury.gov.uk/buildpage.php?id=1133 Canterbury City Council – Twinning contacts. Retrieved on 14 October 2009]. Canterbury.gov.uk (1 March 2011). Retrieved on 25 August 2011.
12. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.calderdale.gov.uk/advice/tourism/towntwinning/towns/aachen.html |title=Aachen: Twin towns: Calderdale Council |first= |last=Calderdale Council |work=calderdale.gov.uk |year=2013 |accessdate=2 January 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130928232645/http://www.calderdale.gov.uk/advice/tourism/towntwinning/towns/aachen.html |archivedate=28 September 2013 |df=dmy-all }}
13. ^{{cite web |url= http://en.db-city.com/Germany--North-Rhine-Westphalia--Aachen--Aachen |title=Aachen, Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany – City, Town and Village of the world |first= |last=en-db |work=en.db-city.com |year=2013|accessdate=3 January 2013}}

Bibliography

{{See also|Timeline of Reims#Bibliography|l1=Bibliography of the history of Reims}}

External links

{{Commons and category}}{{Wikivoyage}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/19981206011247/http://www.ville-reims.com/ Official website] {{Fr icon}}
  • Tourist office website – Official site for L'Office de Tourisme de Reims, {{en icon}}, {{Fr icon}}
  • Sciences Po Paris – Euro-American campus of Reims
  • [https://archive.is/20130102093140/http://dl.dropbox.com/u/49375129/MNUSP/ReimsMUN/Welcome.html Reims Model United Nations]
  • Joan of Arc and The Coronation Of Charles VII in Reims
  • Joan of Arc's first letter to Reims — translation by Allen Williamson of the letter dictated by Joan of Arc to the city of Reims on 5 August 1429.
  • Joan of Arc's second letter to Reims — letter dictated by Joan of Arc to the city of Reims on 16 March 1430, translated by Allen Williamson.
{{Marne communes}}{{Authority control}}

5 : Reims|Communes of Marne (department)|Subprefectures in France|Champagne|Joan of Arc

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