Last modified: 2006-12-23 by ivan sache
Keywords: ille-et-vilaine | cancale | ship: terre-neuva | oyster | eagle: double-headed (black) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Flag of Cancale - Image by Ivan Sache & Pascal Vagnat, 25 June 2001
See also:
Cancale (5,351 inhabitants) is a town and port located at the western
end of the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel and
c. 15 km east of Saint-Malo.
In the past, Cancale was an important fishing port, famous for its
terre-neuvas, which sailed to
Newfoundland (in French, Terre-Neuve)
fishing banks.
The other important resource of Cancale is oyster-farming. The
local oysters were totally destroyed in 1920 by a mysterious disease.
Nowadays, the oyster spat is imported from the south of Brittany and
oysters are kept into 360 ha of sea parks. The plancton specific to
the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel gives the Cancale oysters their typical
taste. According to Petit Larousse Illustré,
cancale can be used as a common name for a Cancale oyster. A
bronze statue entitled "The Oyster Washers" has been placed in front
of the city hall as a tribute to the women who worked in very harsh
conditions in oyster parks.
Cancale is also famous for the bisquine, a sailing ship
with a flat bottom adapted to the shallow waters of the Bay.
Cancale is the birth city of Jeanne Jugan (1792-1879), founder of the congregation of the Little Sisters of the Poor (Petites Soeurs des Pauvres).
Cancale is the starting point of the Marathon of the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel. The specificity of this race is that the arrival can be seen from the start and from everywhere on the route.
Ivan Sache, 25 June 2001
The flag of Cancale can be seen at the entrance of the town and on
a beacon in the port. It is made of the municipal coat of arms placed
on a green field, with CANCALE written in white letters above the
shield.
The coat of arms shows inter alia a terre-neuva
sailing ship and oysters. The green shade of the sea is slightly
lighter than the green shade of the flag field.
Ivan Sache, 25 June 2001