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La Verdoyante : de Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives à Falaise

Falaise - Suisse-Normade - Balade, vélo et sport © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography
Photographe de Tourisme - © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography  © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography
Photographe de Tourisme - © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography  © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography
Chateau_de_Vendeuvre-Loic_Durand___Calvados_Attractivite-3158-1200px
Falaise, Calvados - Normandie - Tour de la ville © Sabina Lorkin @anibasphotography
Photographe de Tourisme - © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography  © Sabina Cowdery @anibasphotography
Credit : © Sabina Cowdery | Anibas Photography

Description

La Verdoyante, a new 200 km cycle path between Lisieux and Noues-de-Sienne (Saint-Sever-Calvados), will take you from Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives, with its majestic medieval market hall, to Falaise, the birthplace of William the Conqueror. This peaceful section runs through flatter countryside, making it suitable for all visitors. Stop on the way to visit the Château de Vendeuvre and its magnificent gardens, or enjoy a drink and a snack at the Arpents du Soleil vineyard. An outing that combines culture, nature, and gourmet treats.

Technical Information

Racing biking
Difficulty
Easy
Duration
1h30mn
Dist.
27 km
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Altimetric profile

Starting point

SAINT-PIERRE-EN-AUGE
Lat : 49.01804Lng : -0.03088

Points of interest

image du object

Château Guillaume-le-Conquérant

Come and experience history at first hand. Discover the castle in virtual reality with the aid of a touchscreen tablet. Falaise Castle is a solid stone fortress dating from around 1000. Built by the first Dukes of Normandy, it was enlarged after the conquest of England in 1066. In the12th century, William’s descendants built two square, typically anglo-norman, keeps using the foundations of the original castle. These buildings show the Dukes of Normandy at the height of their powers. They are most sophisticated of the Royal Dukes’ palace/keeps and best preserved of their fortresses in France. The virtual reconstruction breathes life into the palace, taking you back to the 11th, 12th and 13th centuries. You go back to two different eras with the two circuits: The outside circuit shows you the first fortified enclosure and the daily life in the basse-cour (lower town) in the 12th century. You go inside for the real immersion in the history of the castle. Through your touchscreen tablet, the rooms of the keep appear before you as they would have been in the 13th century. You are plunged straight into the splendour of the Anglo-Norman court - how the people lived in the castle, how their lives were organised, what they all did as part of the daily life of a fortified castle. Images of the people who once lived here appear to tell you their stories with the sounds that accompanied their lives.

Place Guillaume Le Conquérant 14700 FALAISE
- Office de Tourisme Falaise - Suisse Normande -
Consulter
image du object

Le Mémorial de Falaise - Les Civils dans la Guerre

The Battle of Normandy started on D Day - 6 June 1944 - lasted 3 months and put 2 million soldiers in a corner of France that had about a million inhabitants. 150,000 Normans had to evacuate their homes, with an estimated 20,000 killed, mainly as a result of the bombardments. The Falaise area paid its price. The dreadful fighting in the Falaise-Chamois Pocket which marked the end of the Battle of Normandy and the beginning to the rout of the German army, is remembered as among of the most bloody of the war. The Second World war marked a turning point with 30million combatants and 35 million civilians killed: for the first time in the history of modern warfare the civilian dead were more than those of the military. The acknowledgement of the military sacrifice and the need for rapid post war reconstruction, meant the fate of the civilian population was largely forgotten. But now, to remember and pay homage to these millions of civilians, the local government organisations of Falaise and its surrounding countryside, have joined forces to create a memorial to civilian life in the war. Set in the heart of Falaise, next to William the Conqueror’s castle, in one of the major buildings of the first stage of Falaise’s postwar reconstruction, this new museum tells the story of civilian life in the Second World War. The painstaking reconstructions, put together by the Caen Memorial, are put into context by the memories of those who lived through it all.

Place Guillaume le Conquérant 14700 FALAISE
- Office de Tourisme Falaise - Suisse Normande -
Consulter

Additional information

Contact

Email : anne.jolibois@calvados.fr
Website : http://laverdoyante.fr
Tel : 02 31 27 90 30

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Caution!
We have no information on the difficulty of this circuit. You may encounter some surprises along the way. Before you go, please feel free to inquire more and take all necessary precautions. Have a good trip! 🌳🥾