Tourcoing
Tourcoing (French: [tuʁkwɛ̃] ; Dutch: Toerkonje [tuːrˈkɔɲə]; West Flemish: Terkoeje; Picard: Tourco) is a city in northern France on the Belgian border. It is designated municipally as a commune within the department of Nord. Located to the north-northeast of Lille, adjacent to Roubaix, Tourcoing is the chef-lieu of two cantons and the fourth largest city in the French region of Hauts-de-France ranked by population with about 97,000 inhabitants. Together with the cities of Lille, Roubaix, Villeneuve-d'Ascq and eighty-six other communes, Tourcoing is part of four-city-centred metropolitan area inhabited by more than 1.1 million people: the Métropole Européenne de Lille. To a greater extent, Tourcoing belongs to a vast conurbation formed with the Belgian cities of Mouscron, Kortrijk and Tournai, which gave birth to the first European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation in January 2008, Lille–Kortrijk–Tournai with an aggregate of just over 2 million inhabitants.
1. History
The city was the site of a significant victory for France during the French Revolutionary Wars. Marshal Charles Pichegru and his generals Joseph Souham and Jean Moreau defeated a combined force of British and Austrian troops in the Battle of Tourcoing on 29 Floréal II (18 May 1794).
1. Population
1. Main sights
Church of St Christopher (15th-16th centuries), considered one of the most beautiful Neo-Gothic edifices of Nord. In stone and brickwork, it has an 80-metre (262-foot) high bell tower with more than 80 bells. Hospice de Havre, founded in 1260. The cloister and the chapel date from the seventeenth century. Hôtel de Ville (1885), in Second Empire style. Jardin botanique de Tourcoing, a botanical garden and arboretum.
1. Transport
The Tourcoing station is a railway station offering direct connections to Lille and Paris (high speed trains), Kortrijk, Ostend, Ghent and Antwerp. The town was formerly served by the Somain-Halluin Railway. The nearest airports to Tourcoing are Lille Airport which is located 23 km away and Brussels Airport which is located 117 km away.
1. Notable people
Yohan Cabaye (born 1986), footballer Jean-Marc Degraeve (born 1971), chess grandmaster Stéphane Denève (born 1971), conductor Achille Desurmont (1828–1898), writer Brigitte Fossey (born 1946), actress Anna Gomis (born 1973), wrestler Henri Padou (1898–1981), water polo player and 1924 Olympic gold medallist Brigitte Lahaie (born 1955), pornstar Joseph-Charles Lefèbvre (1892–1973), bishop of Bourges, cardinal, cousin of Marcel Lefebvre (1905–1991), missionary priest and, later, archbishop, cousin of Joseph-Charles Mr. Sam (born 1975), a popular deejay and producer running his own record label since 2008. Albert Roussel (1869–1937), composer Yves Devernay (1937–1990), organist Guilbert de Lannoy (1545-c. 1601) and his son Jean de Lannoy (1575-c. 1605) were Protestants from Tourcoing who resettled in Leiden, Holland. Jean's son, Philip Delano (c. 1603 - c. 1681-82; born Philipe de la Noye or Philipe de Lannoy), was an early emigrant to the Plymouth Colony and progenitor of the prominent Delano family, which counts among its descendants prominent figures in American history, including president Franklin Roosevelt.
1. Notable Startups
In 2013, Maxime Piquette and Charles De Potter founded iCreo, a digital audio company in Tourcoing. The company created RadioKing, a platform for internet radio, and Ausha, a platform for podcast hosting and marketing. It received support from regional funders, Nord France Amorquage and IRD Gestion. The company is now the platform for media outlets Le Figaro, Liberation, l'Équipe and AFP, as well as large corporations and independent content producers.
1. International relations
1. = Twin towns - sister cities =
Tourcoing is twinned with:
1. = Other forms of cooperation =
Guimarães, Portugal Mouscron, Belgium Rochdale, England
1. See also
Battle of Tourcoing (1794) Free Institution of Sacred Heart Communes of the Nord department Verlaine Message Museum CO Roubaix-Tourcoing
1. References
1. External links
Tourcoing town council website (in French) Tourcoing Volley-Ball Lille Métropole (Official website of the top team, in French) See pictures from Antonio Mucherino's web site
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