GetWiki
Amiens
ARTICLE SUBJECTS
being →
database →
ethics →
fiction →
history →
internet →
language →
linux →
logic →
method →
news →
policy →
purpose →
religion →
science →
software →
truth →
unix →
wiki →
ARTICLE TYPES
essay →
feed →
help →
system →
wiki →
ARTICLE ORIGINS
critical →
forked →
imported →
original →
Amiens
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{Short description|Capital of the French department of Somme}}{{about|the city in France|the battles which occurred nearby|Battle of Amiens (disambiguation)|the locality in Australia|Amiens, Queensland|the street in Dublin|Amiens Street}}{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
factoids | |
---|---|
History
{{unreferenced section|find=Amiens|find2=history|date=May 2022}}The first known settlement at this location was Samarobriva ("Somme bridge"), the central settlement of the Ambiani tribe, one of the principal tribes of Gaul. The Romans named the town Ambianum, meaning settlement of the Ambiani people. Amiens was part of Francia starting from the 5th century. The Normans sacked the city in 859 and again in 882.In 1113, the city was recognized by King Louis VI of France, and in 1185 it was linked to the Crown of France. In 1597, Spanish soldiers held the city during the six-month Siege of Amiens, before Henry IV regained control. During the 18th and 19th century, the textile tradition of Amiens became famous for its velours. As a result of the French Revolution, the provinces of France were dismantled and the territory was organised into departments. Much of Picardy became the newly created department of Somme with Amiens as the departmental capital. During the industrial revolution, the city walls were demolished, opening up space for large boulevards around the town center. The Henriville neighborhood in the south of the city was developed around this time. In 1848, the first railway arrived in Amiens, linking the city to Boulogne-sur-Mer. During the 1870 Battle of Amiens, the city was occupied by invading Prussian forces.The town was fought over during both the First and Second World Wars, suffering significant damage and being occupied several times by both sides. The 1918 Battle of Amiens was the opening phase of the Hundred Days Offensive which led directly to the Armistice with Germany that ended the war. In June 1944 following D-Day, Amiens was heavily bombed by the Royal Air Force. The town was liberated by British forces on 31 August. The city was rebuilt according to Pierre Dufau's plans with a focus on widening the streets to ease traffic congestion. These newer structures were primarily built of brick, concrete and white stone with slate roofs. The architect Auguste Perret designed the Gare d'Amiens train station and nearby Tour Perret.Geography
Location
(File:Map commune FR insee code 80021.png|thumb|right|Map of the Amiens and its surrounding communes)Amiens, the regional prefecture of Picardy, also functions as the prefecture of the Somme department, one of the three departments (with Oise and Aisne) in the region. Located in the Paris Basin, the city benefits from a privileged geographical position, with close proximity to Paris, Lille, Rouen, London and Brussels. At the crossroads of major European routes of travel (A1, A16 and A29), the city is also at the heart of a major rail star.As the crow flies, the city is {{convert|115|km|mi}} north of Paris, {{convert|97|km|mi}} south-west of Lille, {{convert|100|km|mi}} north-east of Rouen, {{convert|162|km|mi}} east-north-east of Le Havre and {{convert|144|km|mi}} north-west of Reims. At the regional level, Amiens is located {{convert|53|km|mi}} north of Beauvais, {{convert|71|km|mi}} west of Saint-Quentin, {{convert|66|km|mi}} from Compiègne and {{convert|102|km|mi}} from Laon.In area, Amiens is the third-largest settlement in the Somme, after Crécy-en-Ponthieu and Hornoy-le-Bourg.Geology and relief
The area of the commune is {{convert|4946|ha|acre}}; the altitude varies between {{convert|14 and 106|m|ft}}.WEB,weblink Répertoire géographique des communes 2012, Institut géographique national, 1 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150108205314weblink">weblink 8 January 2015, dead,Hydrography: Somme and canal, Avre and Selle
(File:LL 69 - AMIENS - Vue prise dans la vieille ville.JPG|thumb|left|150px|The Somme in the old town at the beginning of the 20th century)(File:INCONNU - Vieil Amiens - Pont Becquet.JPG|thumb|right|The Becquet Bridge, at the start of the 20th century)The main stem of the River Somme passes through Amiens and is generally benign, except during exceptional floods that can last up to several weeks (such as in spring 2001). It is also, on its southeastern outskirts, close to Camon and Longueau, the confluence with its main tributary on the left bank (to the south), and the Avre. The Selle enters from the northwest of Amiens, with two arms (including the Haute Selle) passing behind the Unicorn Stadium, the exhibition park, the megacity and horse racing track, then passing the end of the Promenade de la Hotoie and the zoo of Amiens, and to the right of the water treatment plant, in front of the island Sainte-Aragone, opposite the cemetery of La Madeleine in Amiens.The city developed in a natural narrowing of the river at the level of the {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=hortillonnages}}, due to the advance of the rim of the Picard plateau in Saint-Pierre (ford crossing).{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} The Amiens citadel is built on this limestone butte of the Picard plateau and Rue Saint-Pierre is a slightly inclined path to leave the city from the north. At this narrowing, a network of narrow canals led to the construction of bridges and buildings including textile mills in the Middle Ages.The marshes of the old bed of the river Somme was used to dig peat. Farmers maintained rieux, canals and ditches by cleaning out the silt and used it to append to their vegetable garden plot, the hortillons. Beginning in the 20 th century the descendants of hortillons stopped maintaining the canals and the areas were gradually left to lie fallow or sold to private individuals who created pleasure gardens accessible by boat.WEB, Claire Albin, October 2005, Preliminary study for the cleaning out of ditches and plans of water of the Hortillonnages of Amiens, Universite Tours, The hydrographic network has always been an important city-operated asset. The river helped shape the identity of the landscape, urban and economic territory. It is around the quarters of Saint-Leu, Saint-Maurice bordering the River Somme and most of the administrative and civil area of the current city center which the city has developed since antiquity.The Canal de la Somme dates from the beginning of the 19th century and the bridge at the foot of the citadel was built after World War II.Climate
Amiens has the typical oceanic climate of the north of France, with relatively mild winters, cool summers, and rainfall well distributed throughout the year.(File:Ombrothermic diagram of Amiens.png|800px|centre)Transport
Amiens is a hub between the Ãle de France and the rest of northern France; Normandy and Benelux; and France and Great Britain. Amiens is not directly on principal European road and rail arteries, such as the A1 motorway and the Paris-Lille TGV train line, at present.However, due to its position halfway between the urban areas of Lille and Paris, Amiens has good conditions for service and accessibility, including motorways (at the junction of the A16 and A29).Rail
Amiens station is served by regional train services to destinations that include Rouen, Calais, Lille, Reims, Compiègne and Paris-Nord. Saint-Roch (Somme) station in the western part of the city is served by local trains towards Rouen and Abbeville. A regular bus route with the TGV Haute-Picardie station also provides access to the Charles-de-Gaulle Airport station. On the horizon of 2025,WEB,weblink SNCF : quels sont les chantiers prévus en Picardie en 2015 ?, Nathalie, Tissot, 20 February 2015, France 3 Picardie, the RoissyâPicardie Link will put Amiens 55 minutes from Paris Charles-de-Gaulle Airport and its TGV station.By train, Amiens is located at:{| style="margin:1em auto; vertical-align:top; width:100%;"- 1 hour 5 minutes from Paris (16 round-trip trains per day)
- 1 hour 15 minutes from Lille
- 1 hour 15 minutes from Rouen
- 2 hours 30 minutes from Brussels
- 3 hours 30 minutes from Lyon
- 3 hours from London
Roads
{{see also|{{interlanguage link|Rocade d'Amiens|fr}}}}Since antiquity, Amiens has been a crossroads of important routes. The contemporary city is served by the A16 and A29 autoroutes. The Jules Verne Viaduct, {{convert|943|m|ft}} long, crosses the River Somme to the east of the city and allows circumvention of the city by motorway-type roads. The A16 and A29 autoroutes, the RN1 and the RN25 form a bypass-type motorway around the city that the population has called the Rocade d'Amiens [ring road of Amiens]. Initially constituting national roads which are downgraded today, mostly as departmental roads, the greater urban area of Amiens is served by:{| style="margin:1em auto; vertical-align:top; width:100%;"- RN 1 to Beauvais and Paris, to the South, and towards Abbeville, Calais, Dunkirk and the Belgian border, northwest.
- RN 25 towards Doullens, Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise and Arras
- RD 1029 towards Yvetot and Neufchâtel-en-Bray to the west, Saint-Quentin and La Capelle in the east.
- RD 929 to Albert and Bapaume and Cambrai.
- {{interlanguage link|Route nationale 35|fr|3=Route nationale 35 (France)|lt=RD 935}} towards Compiègne.
- {{interlanguage link|Route nationale 319|fr|3=Route nationale 319|lt=RD 919}} to Mailly-Maillet and Arras.
- {{interlanguage link|Route nationale 333|fr|3=Route nationale 333|lt=RD 933}} to Bernaville and Auxi-le-Château.
- {{interlanguage link|Route nationale 334|fr|3=Route nationale 334|lt=RD 934}} to Roye and Noyon.
- A16 to Calais via Abbeville and Boulogne-sur-Mer
- A16 to Paris via Beauvais
- A29 to Rouen and Le Havre via Neufchâtel-en-Bray
- A29 to Reims via Saint-Quentin and Laon
- The proposed A24 autoroute from Amiens to Lille via Doullens was cancelled in 2006.
Parking
(File:Parking-amiens.png|thumb|300px|Map of parking in the city center of Amiens in 2009{{colbegin|colwidth=10em}}{{legend|#0000fd|Town Hall}}{{legend|#40fc00|Halles}}{{legend|#ffdb2d|Jacobins}}{{legend|#2de9ff|Trois Cailloux}}{{legend|#f80521|Saint-Leu}}{{legend|#f8b934|Amiens 2}}{{legend|#effd00|Perret}}{{legend|#444444|Free outdoor parking}}{{colend}})According to the urban transport plan (PDU) approved 19 December 2013 for the period 2013â2023 parking supply is considered abundant in Amiens.WEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20140523132209weblink">weblink dead, 23 May 2014, PDU â Plan de déplacements urbains â Amiens Métropole â 2013â2023, 19 December 2013, amiens.fr, Although important, demand for parking is less than what is available (capacity reserves are still 20% minimum: If the road is sometimes saturated, the occupancy rate of the underground parking remains globally less than 100%).In 2013, the city counted approximately 70,000 public parking spaces, including 8,400 in the city center and in its immediate vicinity, where 70% of places are paid.- 4,400 spaces on highways (1,950 in the inner city, including 1,600 paid)
- 4,000 spaces in underground parking (620 other new places are programmed in a project for the Gare La Vallée development zone).
Public transport
{{hatnote|1=Main articles: {{interlanguage link|Former tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Ancien tramway d'Amiens}}, {{interlanguage link|Tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Tramway d'Amiens}}, and {{interlanguage link|Public transport in Amiens|fr|3=Transports en commun d'Amiens}}}}Amiens was originally served by two tram lines over {{convert|10.7|km|mi}}, opened in 1887. They intersect at Place Gambetta, one linking {{interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr|3=Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|lt=La Madeleine Cemetery}}, the Church of Saint-Acheul, Cagnard bridge, Rue de Noyon and Rue Jules-Barni; the other from the Church of Saint-Pierre at the racecourse, by the streets of Saint-Leu, Frédéric-Petit and Colbert. Electrified in 1899, the network grew to seven lines totaling {{convert|19|km|mi}} in 1906. From 1932, Longueau was linked to Amiens by a bus service. German bombing in 1940 destroyed most of the city center and hit the Jules-Ferry Road tram {{interlanguage link|Former tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Ancien tramway d'Amiens|lt=depot}}, totally destroying the tram fleet. Only the Longueau bus survived. A few old Parisian buses were also used in an extremely reduced service. These buses as well as the surviving bus were then converted to city gas and equipped with tanks on the roof covered by a huge white dome. This service continued until approximately 1946. There were only two urban lines: An eastâwest line (Saint-Acheul â Montieres) and a northeastâsouthwest line (Beauville â road to Rouen). It was decided after the war to serve the city by a trolleybus with one route to Longueau. This was only in part realized, serving Saint-Acheul, Rouen, La Madeleine and Saint-Pierre. In 1964, trolleybuses were abandoned and the bus became ubiquitous in Amiens transportation.Jean-Marie Fouré, Amiens, du tram au bus, édition du Moulin-Alidor.The bus network is today managed by the Ametis {{interlanguage link|Société d'économie mixte|fr|3=Société d'économie mixte|lt=mixed economy company}}, whose network covers Amiens Métropole, the agglomeration of Amiens. The establishment of dedicated bus lanes began in 2006. Former Mayor Gilles de Robien had envisioned the creation of a tram, but the choice of dedicated bus lanes had been preferred for reasons of cost and patronage. His successor, Mayor {{interlanguage link|Gilles Demailly|fr}}, had been considering the development of a {{tooltip|2=Transport en commun en site propre (public transport in a dedicated site)|TSCP}} in the metropolitan area. As a result of numerous studies and conferences, elected representatives voted for the creation of a tram at the municipal Council of 15 November 2012. The project had been endorsed by the Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole on 18 December 2012 and the commissioning of a first northâsouth {{interlanguage link|Tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Tramway d'Amiens|lt=tram route}} was scheduled for 2018/2019.WEB,weblink Le TCSP, atout majeur de qualité de vie et d'attractivité pour Amiens Métropole., amiens.fr,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120729040327weblink">weblink 29 July 2012, Following the {{interlanguage link|2014 municipal election in Amiens|fr|3=Ãlection municipale de 2014 à Amiens|lt=elections of 2014}}, which were a defeat for most municipal and community carriers of the project, the new mayor of Amiens Brigitte Fouré, and by extension the new president of Amiens Métropole Alain Gest, decided to suspend the project at least during the time of their respective mandates, thus applying a campaign promise (the tram was at the heart of debate)WEB,weblink ALe tramway amiénois toujours au cÅur des débats, Le Courrier picard, 8 April 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140411140850weblink">weblink 11 April 2014, and despite a project announcement of trams on tyres (of TVR type).WEB,weblink Amiens (80): "Aucune forme de tram pendant mon mandat" selon Brigitte Fouré, picardie.france3.fr, 11 April 2014, WEB,weblink AMIENS Pas de tramway durant le mandat de Brigitte Fouré selon un tweet, courrier-picard.fr, 11 April 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150923223036weblink">weblink 23 September 2015, Improvement of public transit would then be only by that of the bus network. Indeed, in December of the same year, the Community Council approved funding for a study (the sixth in 20 years)WEB, Delphine, Richard,weblink AMIENS Tant d'études pour rester à quai, courrier-picard.fr, 28 December 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150104080730weblink">weblink 4 January 2015, relating to the establishment of a rapid transit {{interlanguage link|Public transport in Amiens|fr|3=Transports en commun d'Amiens|lt=bus network}} (BHNS), which should enter into service in March 2019, and whose vehicles could be electric.WEB, Estelle, Thiébault,weblink AMIENS Le bus à haut niveau de service avance, courrier-picard.fr, 19 December 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20141225033431weblink">weblink 25 December 2014, LL 35 - AMIENS - La Place Gambetta (couleur, 2 trams dt le 30).jpg|The Place Gambetta: An important hub of the former tram network of Amiens at the beginning of the 20th centuryLL 65 - AMIENS - Le lycée de Jeunes Filles.JPG|The lycée de jeunes filles and tramway, Rue des Otages, now Lycée Madeleine-MichelisMercedes Citaro O530GII n°331 AMETIS Gare du Nord.jpg|A bus of the network of {{interlanguage link|public transport in Amiens|fr|3=transports en commun d'Amiens}}Cycle networks
File:Vélam Amiens.jpg|thumb|Vélam public bicycle sharing systembicycle sharing systemAmiens has developed two bike services: Buscyclette and {{interlanguage link|Vélam|fr|3=Vélam|lt=Velam}}.- Buscyclette is a service of rental bikes on demand, created in May 1999. In 2014, nearly 2,400 "green bikes" are available for rent, essentially city bikes but also electric bikes (VAE), folding bicycles and specific bikes (kids bikes, child trailers, mountain bikes, cargo bikes, tandems, etc.). The rental period varies from half a day to one year.
- {{interlanguage link|Vélam|fr|3=Vélam|lt=Velam}} is a bike sharing system (VLS) created on 16 February 2008, an adaptation of the {{interlanguage link|Cyclocity|fr}} system managed by JCDecaux, similar to Vélo'v in Lyon and Vélib' in Paris. {{interlanguage link|Vélam|fr}} offers 313 bikes distributed every 300 to 400 metres in the center of Amiens and 26 stations.
Railways
(File:Verrère place Alphonse Fiquet, Gare d'Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|Gare du Nord and its canopy in August 2012)There are three railway stations:- Two stations on the Paris-Boulogne and Amiens â Rouen lines:
- The Amiens station, main station, known as Gare du Nord, in memory of the Compagnie du Nord who created it. Every day, 15,000 travelers use its seven lines.Benoit Delespierre, Longueau, l'autre gare d'Amiens, Courrier picard, 11 avril 2013.
- The station of Saint-Roch
- A station located on the Paris â Lille line in Longueau serving south of Amiens and the communes of Longueau, Cagny, Boves, etc.
- Longueau station, a passenger station of the historic railway hub in Longueau. Every day, 2,500 travellers use its two lines.
- {{interlanguage link|Gare de Montières|fr|lt=Montieres station}}, station assigned to the freight traffic, it serves only the industrial zone of Amiens. This station is located on the former railway line of Doullens.
Air transport
In addition to Amiens â Glisy Aerodrome, bordering the town's eastern edge {{convert|5|km|mi}} from the center, there are several airports nearby.- Albert â Picardie Airport is located 20 minutes northeast of the city.
- Beauvais-Tillé Airport, the ninth largest French airport by usage, located 45 minutes by car south of the city, and served by a bus service from Amiens.
- Lille Airport, reachable by train or by road using the A29 and A1.
- Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport, reachable by train or by road using the A29 and A1, or A16 and N104. The creation of a railway between Creil and Roissy will put Amiens 55 minutes from Paris Charles de Gaulle airport by 2020.WEB,weblink TGV Picardie-Roissy: le ministre des Transports valide le projet, 1 May 2013, Le Courrier picard, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150923232144weblink">weblink 23 September 2015,
Waterways
The Somme canal runs through the town to the English Channel. This canal is linked to the Canal du Nord (Paris to Lille metropolitan area).Urbanism
Urban morphology
Amiens comprises a number of neighbourhoods ("quartiers" in French) with their own characteristics, including Saint-Leu, St-Maurice, Henriville, and Saint-Acheul.Saint-Leu quarter
St-Leu forms part of Amiens, north of the city center. It has many older wooden and brick houses and several canals. At the foot of the cathedral, traversed by canals, this picturesque area was largely rehabilitated during the 1990s. It extends to the Somme canal, located more to the north, at the foot of the Coteau Saint-Pierre on which the fortress of {{interlanguage link|Jean Errard|fr}}, called Citadelle, was built. Historically, it was the poor quarter of the city, where butchers, tanners and dyers gathered.Amiens University's Faculty of Sciences, present since the 1960s, has been renovated and expanded on occasion. The Faculty of Law and Economics has also been transferred since the mid-1990s from the campus (offset to the south of the city) to its new location at the foot of the cathedral.Work had also been delayed, because some people wanted to "preserve the cathedral", the situation was exceptional. The open-air parking it replaces was a "gap" in the landscape dating from World War II. Nonetheless, it allowed an unobstructed view of the cathedral. Most of the buildings have been renovated and transformed into housing much of which is for students, many of whom are in the quarter.The area became the heart of the Amiens people's evenings, with many establishments (bars, restaurants, etc.) on Place du Don and Quai Bélu.The church is found at Rue Saint-Leu, located just between the Faculty of Science and Law-Economy (UPJV).Two theatres were established in the quarter, that of the Chés Cabotans (puppet shows in the Picard language) and the Maison du Théâtre at the foot of the Saint-Leu Church. There is also La Lune des Pirates, a concert hall.Saint Leu rue d'Engoulvent.jpg|Saint-Leu: Rue d'Engoulvent and Rue des MajotsSaint Leu rue d'Engoulvent depuis Majot.jpg|Saint-Leu: Rue d'EngoulventPlace Aristide Briand Amiens.jpg|Saint-Leu: Place Aristide BriandAmiens quartier saint leu canaux 200503.jpg|Canal in the Saint-Leu quarterQuai belu amiens.JPG|Quai Bélu on the banks of the Somme, near the old market on the watersideAmiens_StLeuAviron.jpg|The Samarobriva footbridge from the Sport Nautique d'Amiens to Saint-Pierre Park in 2009Saint-Maurice quarter
Located to the west of the Citadelle, and east of the {{interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr|3=Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|lt=La Madeleine Cemetery}}, this very old working-class quarter of Amiens acted as an industrial center in the 18th century. It is currently undergoing significant housing renovation and development.Bordered by the Canal de la Somme, it offers a stopover for leisure boats, which must go through a lock.The walls of the city's former dye factory are now those of the {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure d'art et de design d'Amiens|fr}} (ESAD) as well as those of the Faculty of Arts. The Ãcole supérieure d'ingénieurs en électronique et électrotechnique (ESIEE) is in the same quarter. As the Citadelle, it will be renovated by the architect Renzo Piano to accommodate the university departments (UFR) of: letters, history and geography, languages, the {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure du professorat et de l'éducation|fr}} (ESPE), the House of Languages, the House of Research and the University Library in 2015.The {{interlanguage link|Jardin des plantes d'Amiens|fr|3=Jardin des plantes d'Amiens|lt=Jardin des plantes}}, known as the Jardin du Roy within the city, is also located in this quarter.File:Ami1b.JPG|thumb|The River SommeRiver SommeHenriville-quarter
The Henriville neighborhood was mostly built during the 19th century after the demolition of the city wall. It lies at the south of the town center. It has numerous bourgeois houses and townhouses, predominantly in brick, blending architectural styles of the period, including neoclassical, troubadour and neo-Gothic. There are also private mansions, such as the Acloque mansion and the house of Jules Verne.Saint-Acheul quarter
The Saint-Acheul quarter ({{IPA-fr|sÉÌtâ¿aÊÅl|IPA}}) existed before Amiens' inception, as people have lived there since prehistoric times. This is where archaeological excavations in the nineteenth century discovered prehistoric tool sets typical of the "Acheulean" prehistorical era, named after this neighborhood (also spelled Acheulian, pronounced {{IPA-fr|aÊÅljÉÌ|}}). Civilians can freely visit the archaeological garden there.Not to be confused with the commune of Saint-Acheul situated {{convert|37|km|0|abbr=on}} to the north, the quarter of Saint-Acheul is the site of a military cemetery from the First World War (1914â1918).It also contains the Church of Saint-Acheul, and the former normal school of teachers which became the Lycée Robert-de-Luzarches. A number of famous people are buried in the former Saint-Acheul cemetery such as the creator of Bécassine J.P. Pinchon, and many resistance fighters. Part of the quarter includes a so-called "English neighborhood," with typical English style houses. At the feet of this area lie the {{interlanguage link|hortillonnages|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens}}, a marshy area criss-crossed by canals.Other neighborhoods
Amiens, like other big cities, has its large HLM high-rise tower blocks:- North of the city the quarters du Pigeonnier, which is famous for its weekend market, Messenger, Mozart, Fafet-Brossolette-la Cité, Balzac, Léo Lagrange-Schweitzer, etc.;
- Southeast of the city: Victorine-Autier, Philéas Lebesgue, Condorcet, Pierre-Rollin.
- West: Etouvie and Montières (an ecodistrict is provided in this industrial space, where there are 19th century in brick buildings).JOURNAL, Amiens, Un écoquartier en projet à Montières, E.G, Le Moniteur, 5510, 3 July 2009,
- East: Saint-Acheul-la-Cité and the Clos de l'Avre.
Housing
(File:Amiens_rue_du_Don.jpg|thumb|Houses in the Saint-Leu quarter.)In 2017, the total number of dwellings in the municipality was 73,541, while it was 63,178 in 1999.WEB,weblink Dossier complet, Commune d'Amiens (80021), Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques, INSEE, 29 June 2020, 2 September 2020, Among this housing, 88.7% were primary residences, 2.1% of secondary residences and 9.2% vacant housing. These dwellings were 35.6% of houses and 63.4% of apartments.The proportion of principal residences, which were the properties of occupants, was 31.9%, down from 2007 (34.4%). The share of empty rented HLM homes (social housing) was up: 29.8% against 29.4% in 2007, their number increased from 18,268 to 19,431. However, this percentage remains much greater than the rate of 20% required by the {{interlanguage link|Loi relative à la solidarité et au renouvellement urbains|fr|3=Loi relative à la solidarité et au renouvellement urbains|lt=law on solidarity and urban renewal}} (SRU) for cities and agglomerations of more than 50,000 inhabitants.The identity of the city is strongly marked by the specificity of its housing stock, consisting in a large proportion of detached houses, semi-detached, single or bourgeois: the amiénoises. These traditional houses in the suburbs, in brick, were intrinsically linked to the expansion of the city during and after the Industrial Revolution.The amiénoise simple includes a window on the ground floor and floors for attic and basement. It is built on a plot of a few metres wide but is very deep, and includes a garden, forming hearts with green islets and sparse areas. The amiénoise double has two windows at each level. The grandes amiénoises and townhouses rise to at least two floors with large rooms. They can have a gate opening onto a paved courtyard.WEB,weblink L'Amiénoise, Alain, Boulnois, 2008, le site du centre régional de documentation pédagogique de l'académie d'Amiens, 2 June 2015, 24 May 2016,weblink dead, The official buildings or mansions regularly use brick façades on a sandstone base, decorated by stone window and door frames.The Chanoines quarter has stone façades exclusively.In historic areas such as the {{interlanguage link|Saint-Leu (Amiens)|fr|3=Saint-Leu (Amiens)|lt=Saint-Leu}} quarter, façades widely use wood, half-timbered or siding, and wattle and daub.Development projects
- Amiens 2030: Amiens, in the context of the Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole, is developing a master development plan called Amiens 2030.WEB,weblink Le projet métropolitain Amiens 2030, amiens.fr, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140903155027weblink">weblink 3 September 2014, This strategic outreach project is centered around the priority issues of economic, social and cultural development of the agglomeration. The whole process of reflection will determine the development of the metropolis by 2030.
- {{interlanguage link|Citadelle d'Amiens|fr|3=Citadelle d'Amiens|lt=La Citadelle}}: This flagship project for the agglomeration involves the amalgamation of units of training and research from the University of Picardie in letters, languages, history, geography, philosophy, sociology, psychology and the {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure du professorat et de l'éducation|fr|3=Ãcole supérieure du professorat et de l'éducation|lt=College teaching and education}} (ESPE) on the site of La Citadelle. It is to be set on {{convert|18|acre|ha}} on the outskirts of downtown. This university construction program is intended to strengthen regional competitiveness and the development of higher education and research. The project, entrusted to the Italian architect Renzo Piano, will be accessible to all inhabitants.
- ZAC Gare-la-Vallée: The project intends to strengthen Amiens in its role as the regional capital and allow the creation of a genuine business district in the heart of the city. With a budget of â¬157 million, the project combines tertiary activities, shops and a habitat walk from the station and the inner city. The first buildings were inaugurated in 2008. The second phase of development extended from 2012 to 2017. Under the control of the Chief Architect, Paul Chemetov, the quarter must accommodate 2,000 homes, {{convert|200000|m2|sqft}} of offices and two urban parks creating a visible link between downtown, the Somme and the {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=Hortillonnages}}.WEB,weblink Amiens Gare La Vallée, projet Gare-la-Vallée,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120616222450weblink">weblink 16 June 2012,
- ZAC Intercampus: This new housing and services quarter in the south of the city is projected to host 1,900 dwellings by 2030.WEB,weblink Construction de logements revue à la baisse à la ZAC Intercampus d'Amiens, Alexandre, Boudard, 5 October 2014, Le Courrier picard, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150923223424weblink">weblink 23 September 2015, A first tranche of 850 dwellings must be delivered in 2015. Located in the immediate vicinity of the campus and the CHU d'Amiens, it will be served by a future TCSP. The ecodistrict of {{convert|80|ha|acre}} is projected to provide green spaces and gardens, with 60% of its total area to not be built-up. It will include {{convert|12|ha|acre}} of gardens.WEB,weblink ZAC Intercampus sur le site d'Amiens Aménagement, 2 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20151016132704weblink">weblink 16 October 2015, dead,
- ZAC Paul Claudel: This new housing and services quarter of {{convert|40|ha|acre}} is located at the southern entrance to the city. Intended as a small neighborhood, it must accommodate 1,400 units and {{convert|1800|m2|sqft}} of commercial space. Designed in 4 slices, together with its inhabitants, it entered its final phase of development in 2013.WEB,weblink ZAC Paul Claudel sur le site d'Amiens Aménagement, 2 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20141006095900weblink">weblink 6 October 2014, dead,
- ZAC Renancourt: This new quarter must ensure the development of the city to the west. Located between the Grâce Valley, the Selle Valley, the Renancourt quarter and its suburb, this planning area is a natural viewpoint over the city. It is also adjacent to emblematic facilities of the city: The Zenith of Amiens, the Stade de la Licorne and the {{interlanguage link|Mégacité d'Amiens|fr|3=Mégacité d'Amiens|lt=megacity}}. By 2018, this residential area is projected to accommodate 1,400 houses, a hotel, facilities and shops.WEB,weblink ZAC Renancourt, Amiens Aménagement, 2 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20141006105142weblink">weblink 6 October 2014, dead,
- Bus rapid transit (BRT): A project of three BRT lines is under consideration for commissioning in 2019, at the end of two years of work. Estimated at â¬85 million excluding taxes, and spanning {{convert|44|km|mi}}, the project would include the construction of a new bus depot and four park and ride stops.WEB,weblink Transport : le BHNS, cerise sur le gâteau des Assises, Jean-Christophe, Fouquet, 11 February 2015, amiens.fr, 2 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150218120746weblink">weblink 18 February 2015, dead, This project follows the cancellation of a tram project, which was endorsed by the municipal team in place between 2008 and 2014.
Toponymy
The toponym is derived from the name of the local Gallic people, the Ambiani, which in the 4th century, replaced the old name of the town {{interlanguage link|Samarobriva|fr}} (the bridge on the Samara â Somme). Amiens then became the episcopal headquarters.BOOK, Jacques, Chaurand, Maurice, Lebègue, Noms de lieux de Picardie, 35, Condé-sur-Noireau, Bonneton, 1990, 978-2-86253-265-3, In Picard, Amiens is called Anmyen.Politics and administration
Political trends and results
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Municipal elections in Amiens|fr|3=Ãlections municipales à Amiens}}}}{{Expand section|date=June 2015}}Municipal administration
The number of inhabitants is estimated between 100,000 and 149,999, and the number of members of the municipal council is 55.WEB,weblink L2121-2, legifrance.gouv.fr, As a result of the French municipal elections of 2014, the distribution of seats is as follows:{| class="toccolours" style="margin:auto; text-align:center;"The cantons
{{hatnote|1=Main articles: Cantons of the Somme department and {{interlanguage link|2015 departmental elections in Somme|fr|3=Ãlections départementales de 2015 dans la Somme}}}}Amiens is divided into seven cantons:{| rules="all" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="4" style="margin:auto; border:1px solid #999;"Deputies
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|2022 legislative elections in Somme|fr|3=Ãlections législatives de 2022 dans la Somme}}}}Amiens is divided into two legislative districts:- Somme's 1st constituency (including Amiens II North-West, Amiens IV East, Amiens VIII North): François Ruffin (Picardie Debout, NUPES)
- Somme's 2nd constituency (including Amiens I West, Amiens III North-East, Amiens V South-East, Amiens VII South-West, Amiens VI South): Barbara Pompili (RE)
List of mayors
{{hatnote|1=Main articles: {{interlanguage link|List of mayors of Amiens|fr|3=Liste des maires d'Amiens}}, {{interlanguage link|Municipal elections in Amiens|fr|3=Ãlections municipales à Amiens}}, and {{interlanguage link|2014 municipal elections in Amiens|fr|3=Ãlection municipale de 2014 à Amiens}}}}On 4 April 2014, Brigitte Fouré (IDU (NC)) succeeded {{interlanguage link|Gilles Demailly|fr}} (PS). Her list was elected in the second round on 30 March 2014 with 50.39% of the votes.NEWS,weblink Résultats municipales 2014: Amiens rebascule une nouvelle fois, 30 March 2014, Huffington Post, {| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto;"|+ List of successive mayors since 1944! Start! End! Name! Party! Other detailsJudicial and administrative authorities
Amiens is a city marked by a strong judicial tradition, with the historical presence of its Court of Appeal, the {{interlanguage link|Cour d'appel d'Amiens|fr|3=Cour d'appel d'Amiens}}, as well as all courts of first and second degree of {{interlanguage link|Ordre judiciaire in France|fr|3=Ordre judiciaire en France|lt=judicial order}}. The Court of Appeal of Amiens has jurisdiction over the three departments of Picardy, with nine {{interlanguage link|Tribunal de grande instance (France)|fr|3=Tribunal de grande instance (France)|lt=high courts}}.More recently, Amiens has become the seat of:- The {{interlanguage link|Cour nationale de l'incapacité et de la tarification de l'assurance des accidents du travail|fr|3=Cour nationale de l'incapacité et de la tarification de l'assurance des accidents du travail|lt=national court of disability and the pricing of insurance for work accidents}}.{{interlanguage link|Code de la sécurité sociale (France)|fr|3=Code de la sécurité sociale (France)|lt=Code de la sécurité sociale}}, art. R. 143â16, issued with the {{interlanguage link|Décret en France|fr|3=Décret en France|lt=décret}} no.2003-614 of 3 July 2003.
- An {{interlanguage link|Tribunal administratif (France)|fr|3=Tribunal administratif (France)|lt=administrative tribunal}} whose rulings may be {{interlanguage link|Appeal in French justice|fr|3=Appel dans la justice française|lt=appealed}} to the {{interlanguage link|Cour administrative d'appel|fr|3=Cour administrative d'appel|lt=administrative court of appeal}} of Douai.
- The {{interlanguage link|Chambre régionale des comptes|fr|3=Chambre régionale des comptes|lt=Regional Chamber of Auditors}} of Picardy.
Environmental policy
{{Expand section|date=June 2015}}Twin towns â sister cities
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in France}}Amiens is twinned with:WEB, Coopération avec les villes jumelées,weblink amiens.fr, Amiens, fr, 2021-04-20,- {{flagicon|Germany}} Dortmund, Germany (1960)
- {{flagicon|Germany}} Görlitz, Germany (1971)
- {{flagicon|United Kingdom}} Darlington, England, United Kingdom (1973)
Population and society
Demography
The inhabitants of Amiens are called the AmiénoisWEB,weblink Nom des habitants des communes françaises, habitants.fr of Lionel Delvarre, and their blason populaire is Chés maqueux d'gueugues (the eaters of nuts).The population of Amiens has risen sharply since the mid-19th century: Its population doubled between 1850 and 1960, from 50,000 to 100,000 inhabitants, i.e. a gain of 50,000 people over this period of 110 years, and gaining about 30,000 others since (over 50 years only this time).Demographic evolution
In 2017, the commune had 134,057 inhabitants.Population en historique depuis 1968, INSEE{{Historical populations|align=none|cols=3|graph-pos = bottom|footnote = From 1962 to 1999: Population without double counting; for the years following: municipal population.Age structure
Amiens is distinguished by the youthfulness of its population. In 2017, more than 25% of the population of the city was less than 20 years old. The rate of people of an age over 60 years (19.3%) is also lower than the national rate (25.5%) and the departmental rate (25.4%). Like national and departmental allocations, the female population of the municipality is greater in number to the male population, with a rate of 52.5%, whereas the national rate is 51.6%.{| style="margin:auto; width:100%;"Education
Primary and secondary education
Educational institutions of the city fall under the supervision of the {{interlanguage link|Académie d'Amiens (éducation)|fr|3=Académie d'Amiens (éducation)|lt=Academy of Amiens}}WEB,weblink ac-amiens.fr, Rectorat de l'Académie, d'Amiens, ac-amiens.fr, which develops curriculum according to the Inspection académique la Somme.On 1 September 2010, 10,658 children were enrolled in the Amiens public schools: 4,341 in nursery school and 6,317 in {{interlanguage link|Elementary schools in France|fr|3=Ãcole élémentaire en France|lt=elementary school}}.WEB,weblink Ãcoles, amiens.fr, 16 February 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140210180029weblink">weblink 10 February 2014, In 2011, the Amiens agglomeration included 46 nursery schools, six elementary schools and 54 primary schools including eleven private. It had nine public colleges and six private colleges. Amiens has 24 schools:- Vocational high schools: Acheuléen, Ãdouard-Branly, Edouard-Gand, La Providence (private), Montaigne, Romain Rolland, {{interlanguage link|Lycée Sacré-CÅur (Amiens)|fr|3=Lycée Sacré-CÅur (Amiens)|lt=Sacré-CÅur}} (private), Saint-Martin (private), Saint-Rémi (private) and Saint-Riquier (private).
- General and technological high schools: Robert de Luzarches, La Hotoie, Jean Baptiste Delambre, La Providence (private), {{interlanguage link|Lycée Sacré-CÅur (Amiens)|fr|3=Lycée Sacré-CÅur (Amiens)|lt=Sacré-CÅur}} (private), Saint-Martin (private), Saint-Rémi (private), Saint-Riquier (private) and Sainte-Famille (private).
- General secondary schools: {{interlanguage link|Lycée Louis-Thuillier|fr|3=Lycée Louis-Thuillier|lt=Louis Thuillier}}, Madeleine Michelis (former high school for girls, established in 1883 by Marie Hugonin, wife of Charles Eugène Bertrand, mother of Paul Bertrand and niece of Bishop {{interlanguage link|Flavien-Abel-Antoine Hugonin|fr}}, Bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux â the inaugural speech was delivered by Jules Verne.)
- Technological lycées: Ãdouard-Branly, Ãdouard-Gand.
Higher education
The Amiens metropole welcomes one of the largest student populations in France. In 2013, the city had 26,000 students (3,300 in short-term)WEB,weblink Vie étudiante, Ville d'Amiens, 31 March 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130330030045weblink">weblink 30 March 2013, and 800 researchersWEB,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150904084633weblink">weblink dead, 4 September 2015, Etudier et vivre à Amiens, July 2013, Amiens forum n°43, 4 July 2013, who are divided into some 40 institutions of higher education, 32 laboratories, and 10 units associated with the National Scientific Research Centre or the French Institute of Health and Medical Research.{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|- The University of Picardie Jules Verne (UPJV) is headquartered in Amiens and has a broad range of courses:
- Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy
- Faculty of Law, Politics and Economics
- Faculty of Sciences
- IUP MIAGE (computing in companies)
- Faculty of Human Sciences, Literature, Languages, Sport Sciences
- IUT (Institut Universitaire Technique) of Management, Administration, Computing, Mechanical Engineering, Biological Engineering, Commercial Management.
- Faculty of Arts
- Preparatory courses for sciences, economics, biology schools and others
- ESIEE (Engineering School of Electronics and Electrical Technology)
- Business school
- ESC Amiens (Business school)
- ESAD (School of Art and Design)
- Brevet de technicien supérieur (advanced vocational diploma) in audio-visual methods
- School of Nursing
- Midwifery college
- Physiotherapy and Massage School
- Teacher training college
Health
The Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU) or, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire of Amiens Picardie, is organized around four sites:- South Hospital, Avenue René-Laënnec
- North Hospital, Place Victor-Pauchet
- Saint-Victor Centre, 354 Bis Boulevard de Beauville
- Obstetrics and Gynaecology Centre, 124 Rue Camille-Desmoulins
- Polyclinic of Picardy, 43 Rue Alexandre Dumas
- Clinic of Europe, 5 Allée des Pays-Bas
- Victor Pauchet Heath Group, 2 Avenue Irlande
Sport
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Sport in Amiens|fr|3=Sport à Amiens}}}}Thanks to a large proportion of youth in its population and the dynamism and the success of its sports clubs, Amiens has been awarded the title of {{interlanguage link|The sportiest city of France|fr|3=Challenge de la ville la plus sportive de France|lt="Sportiest city of France"}} by the L'Ãquipe newspaper in 1999. The city had already won the title in 1969. In 2013, Amiens Métropole had nearly 300 sports associations and Sports Recreation: approximately 150 associations are grouped within the Office of Amiens Metropole SportsWEB,weblink Liste des clubs, Office des Sports d'Amiens Métropole, osam.fr, 5 May 2014, and 150 others are referenced without being adherents.WEB,weblink Liste des autres clubs d'Amiens Métropole, Office des Sports d'Amiens Métropole, osam.fr, 5 May 2014, According to this same Office for Sports, Amiens has 25,000 members of sports clubs, excluding school and university members.- (File:American football pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) American Football
- (File:Archery pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Archery
- (File:Athletics pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Athletics
- (File:Badminton pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Badminton
- (File:Valencian pelota pictogram.jpg|frameless|25px) Ballon au poing
- (File:Fencing pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Fencing
- (File:Field hockey pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Field hockey
- (File:Indoor hockey pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Floorball
- (File:Football pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Football
- (File:Golf pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Golf
- (File:Handball pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Handball
- (File:Ice hockey pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Ice hockey
- (File:Tennis pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Longue paume
- (File:Inline hockey pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Roller in-line hockey
- (File:Rowing pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Rowing
- (File:Rugby union pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Rugby union
- (File:Swimming pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Swimming
- (File:Table tennis pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Table tennis
- (File:Tennis pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Tennis
- (File:Volleyball (indoor) pictogram.svg|frameless|25px) Volleyball
Media
Newspapers and news magazines
- {{interlanguage link|Le Courrier picard|fr|3=Le Courrier picard|lt=Le Courrier picard}}, the principal regional newspaper was founded in 1944. Its headquarters are located at 29 Rue de la République (it sold 64,587 copies in 2013).WEB, Le Courrier Picard, OJD,weblink 3 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150612132801weblink">weblink 12 June 2015, dead,
- {{interlanguage link|Fakir (journal)|fr|3=Fakir (journal)|lt=Fakir}}, an independent journal was founded in Amiens in 1999 by François Ruffin.
- Le Télescope d'Amiens, pure player of local information, was in publication from September 2012 to April 2014.WEB, Le Télescope d'Amiens,weblink
Audiovisual
Television channels
File:France 3 Picardie building in Amiens - front with logo.jpg|thumb|right|The headquarters of France 3 PicardieFrance 3 Picardie- The headquarters of France 3 Picardie, the channel that broadcasts Picardie Matin - Picardy Morning among other programming, is located on Rue Roger Martin du Gard, to the north of the city.
- Canal Nord, a local channel created in the mid-1980s in the northern districts, is now extended to the entire city via the Wibox network;
- {{interlanguage link|Wéo Picardie|fr}}, (broadcast suspended since 8 January 2014).
- {{interlanguage link|TV Amiens|fr}}, a local television channel on the internet.
- WebTV Picardie, an internet television channel of the {{interlanguage link|Regional Council of Picardie|fr|3=Conseil régional de Picardie}}.
FM radio stations
Most of the national radio stations broadcast their programs in the Amiens area and can be added to France Bleu Picardie (100.2 MHz) and local stations {{interlanguage link|Radio Campus Amiens|fr}} (87.7 MHz) and {{interlanguage link|Radio Galaxie programme Ãvasion|fr}} (97.7 MHz).{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="text-align:center; width:100%;"|+ FM radio stations broadcast to Amiens, as of 27 February 2015Digital terrestrial radio stations
As of 1 March 2015, the CSA has not selected Amiens for broadcast or experimentation of this broadcasting standard.Telecommunications
The city of Amiens is covered for:- Cable by {{interlanguage link|CityPlay|fr|3=CityPlay|lt=Wibox/Cityplay}} since 2002.WEB,weblink Notre présence, CityPlay, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140919062853weblink">weblink 19 September 2014,
- Fibre optic by {{interlanguage link|CityPlay|fr|3=CityPlay|lt=Wibox/Cityplay}} since 2007WEB,weblink France CitéVision choisit la solution d'accès optique GPON d'Alcatel-Lucent, Alcatel-Lucent, 10 September 2017,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20170910070431weblink">weblink 10 September 2017, dead, and by Orange since 2013.WEB,weblink On va surfer dix fois plus vite, Le Courrier picard, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150923231135weblink">weblink 23 September 2015,
- ADSL, with five telephone exchanges, the majority of which are unbundled, by SFR, Free, Bouygues Telecom and {{interlanguage link|Completel|fr}}.WEB,weblink L'ADSL Ã Amiens, Ariase,
Houses of worship
Buddhist
The Zen SÅtÅ Zen centre affiliated with the international Zen Association, on Rue Vulfran Warmé.Catholic
- Notre-Dame Cathedral, Place Notre-Dame
- Chapelle du Bon Pasteur (first of the name): Situated on Rue Daire, it belonged to the {{interlanguage link|Conseil départemental de la Somme|fr|3=Conseil départemental de la Somme|lt=Conseil général de la Somme}}. Leased to the Society of St. Pius X from 1983 to 2007, it was sold, with the property complex to which it belonged, to Picardy in May 2007.
- {{interlanguage link|Chapelle Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Amiens)|fr|3=Chapelle Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Amiens)|lt=Chapelle Saint-Vincent-de-Paul}}, situated on Rue Jules Barni, the offices are run by the Society of St. Pius X according to the Tridentine Mass (an extraordinary form the Roman rite).
- The church of Saint Honoré known as the église de Beauvais,{{Base Mérimée|IA80000144}} Rue Dom Bouquet
- The church of Saint-Acheul, Chaussée Jules Ferry
- The church of Saint-Firmin-le-Martyr, 137 Rue du Faubourg du Hem
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Germain-l'Ãcossais d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Saint-Germain-l'Ãcossais d'Amiens|lt=church of Saint-Germain-l'Ãcossais}}, Rue Pingre
- The church of Sacré-CÅur, Rue de Mareuil
- The church of Saint-Jacques, Rue Saint-Jacques
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Leu d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Saint-Leu d'Amiens|lt=church of Saint-Leu}}, Rue Saint-Leu
- The church of Saint-Martin, Rue Morgan
- The church of Saint-Maurice, Rue Turgot
- The church of Saint-Pierre, Rue St Pierre
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Rémi d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Saint-Rémi d'Amiens|lt=church of Saint-Rémi}}, Rue des Cordeliers
- The church of Saint-Roch, Rue de l'Abbaye
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Sainte-Anne d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Sainte-Anne d'Amiens|lt=church of Sainte-Anne}}, Rue Vulfran Warmé
- The church of Sainte-Jeanne-d'Arc, Route de Rouen
- The church of Saint-Paul, Rue de l'Ãle-de-France
- The church of Saint-Pierre in the Montières quarter
- The church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine in the Renancourt quarter
- The church of Sainte-Thérèse, Avenue de la Paix
- The church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Rue de Cagny
Jewish
The synagogue in Amiens is located at 12 Rue du Port d'Amont, near Pont-Beauville.Mormon
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has a place of worship on the Doullens road.Muslim
The city of Amiens has the largest Muslim community of Picardy and one of the largest in the north of the France. Places of worship are evolving, several mosques are in a phase of expansion or relocation. The city has fifteen Muslim places of worship including eight independent prayer rooms and seven mosques:The Muslim Directory â Directory of products and services to Francophone Muslims (France and Belgium) WEB,weblink L'Annuaire musulman,- The An-Nour mosque where sits the Institute of the Arab-Muslim world of Picardy in Rue de la Hotoie.
- The Al-Fath mosque (currently moving premises), also the Association of Worship and Culture of Muslims in Picardy located at 375 Boulevard Beauvillé.
- The Al Badr mosque, also the Association of workers and Moroccan traders of Amiens, located at 33 Rue Winston-Churchill.
- The Masjid Al Muhsinin mosque located on the Rue de l'île-de-France.
- The Sounnahs mosque located Rue Victorine-Autier.
- The Chekkar mosque, also Association of the Committee of the Briqueterie located at 40 Rue Ronsard.
- The Mosque of the "19" is located at 19 Avenue de l'Europe and is home to the Association of Muslims in Picardy.
Protestant
The Protestant Church of Amiens, Rue Saint-Jacques.Economy
As both an industrial hub and a services center, Amiens enjoys a large pool of workers with a labor pool of over 350,000 inhabitants and numerous professional training courses.The magazine {{interlanguage link|L'Entreprise (magazine)|fr|3=L'Entreprise (magazine)|lt=L'Entreprise}} elected Amiens "Most attractive city of France" for businesses, in 2009 and 2007, for the category less than 200,000 inhabitants. The city finished second in 2010, 2008 and 2006. The strengths of the city include a developed real estate business and taxation around the average for French cities. In addition, its geographical position in the center of the triangle "Paris â London â Brussels", is between three major European cities.The magazine Challenges has also designated Amiens as "Best managed city of France", for the category large cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants, in 2011, 2010 and 2008.Income of the population and taxation
In 2010, the median taxable household income was â¬22,539, which placed Amiens at 177th place among the 31,525 communes with more than 39 households in metropolitan France.WEB,weblink Fichier RFDM2010COM : Revenus fiscaux localisés des ménages â Année 2010, Insee, In 2017, the proportion of taxable households was 45%.Employment
In 2017, the population aged 15 to 64 years amounted to 91,555 persons, among which there were 64.5% of assets including 51.4% having a job and 13.1% of unemployed.There were 78,284 jobs in the employment area, against 80,908 in 2007. The number of assets employed and residing in the area of employment being 47,588. The concentration of jobs indicatorThe concentration of employment indicator equals the number of jobs in the area per 100 people in active employment residing in the area, according to the Insee definition. is 164.5%, which means that the employment area offers three jobs for every two active inhabitants.{{center|Distribution of employment (2017)}}{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; font-size:90%; width:90%; border:0; text-align:center; line-height:120%;"Businesses and shops
(File:Chambre Régionale de Commerce et d'Industrie de Picardie, Amiens, 2012. Chartier-Corbasson architectes..jpg|thumb|right|{{interlanguage link|Chamber of commerce and industry of Amiens|fr|3=Chambre de commerce et d'industrie d'Amiens}} and {{interlanguage link|Chartier-Corbasson architectes|fr}}, in 2012)On 31 December 2015, at Amiens, there were 10,436 businesses: 51 in agriculture, forestry and fisheries, 394 in industry, 685 in construction, 7,110 in trade, transportation and various services and 2,196 were related to the administrative sector.In 2018, 1,505 companies had been recorded as being established in Amiens, including 1,206 companies owned by sole proprietors.Philatelic publishers Yvert et Tellier (catalogues of quotes) and l'Ãcho de la timbrologie (magazine) have their management in Amiens, even if they have more of their services in the Paris region. The Gueudet Group, one of the largest car dealers in France, was established at Amiens in 1918. The old textile tradition of the city remains with the factory of Lee Cooper France (122 employees).Since the end of World War II, much of the city's economy was tied to automotive equipment with companies such as Valeo, Goodyear and Sumitomo-Dunlop tires. In 2003, the American Goodyear company bought Dunlop. These two companies suffered financially through late 2007 and early 2008, and in response, the American Goodyear company headquarters in the United States offered workers a change to their working hours and the number of posts, which a high percentage of staff refused.Procter & Gamble, settled in Amiens in 1964 to produce soap, and inaugurated its new detergents unit in 1966. Established on over more than {{convert|45|ha|acre}}, it is one of the largest factories in the world for laundry cleaning products (Ariel, Dash, Bonux, Gama) and for domestic cleaning products (Mr. Clean, Febreze). More than 85% of its production is intended for export.The Amiens plant employs approximately 930 people.Since the mid-1990s, the city has tried to convert the economy towards the internet and telephony industries. Many call centres (Intracall center, Coriolis France, Médiamétrie)Insee, Picardie : diagnostic et perspectives, chapitre Dynamiques économiques, p.36, 2006. have opened mainly within the city, region or state. The Unilog (now Logica) computer service company has installed a service center in Amiens (the CSA).Amiens is the seat of the {{interlanguage link|Regional Chamber of commerce and industry of Picardy|fr|3=Chambre régionale de commerce et d'industrie de Picardie}}. It is also the seat of the {{interlanguage link|Chamber of commerce and industry of Amiens|fr|3=Chambre de commerce et d'industrie d'Amiens}}. It manages the Amiens - Glisy Aerodrome.Culture, tourism and heritage
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|List of historic monuments of Amiens|fr|3=Liste des monuments historiques d'Amiens}}}}The strategic position of Amiens makes it an attractive destination for a weekend or a few days, from Paris, Lille or Brussels. Amiens also benefits from the proximity of the Baie de Somme, a tourist hotspot registered at the {{interlanguage link|Club des plus belles baies du monde|fr}} and labelled {{interlanguage link|Label Grand Site de France|fr|3=Label Grand Site de France|lt=Great Site of France}}.Amiens has the label of Towns and Lands of Art and History since 1992. Within this framework, the host of the heritage organises guided tours on themes intended for an audience of adults and children, with educational workshops. A signposted circuit allows an independent tour of the town, with information panels offering comment on places and notable buildings.Amiens has an important historical and cultural heritage, and an accessible and varied natural heritage, on which tourism is based. The main attractions are the cathedral, which is included in the world heritage of UNESCO, the {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=hortillonnages}}, {{interlanguage link|Maison de Jules Verne|fr|3=Maison de Jules Verne|lt=Jules Verne House}}, the Tour Perret, the Musée de Picardie, the {{interlanguage link|Zoo d'Amiens|fr|3=Zoo d'Amiens|lt=zoo}}, and the quarters of Saint-Leu and Saint-Maurice.Places and monuments
The commune has an exceptional heritage: 60 monuments listed in the inventory of monuments historiques and over 1600 places and monuments listed in the general inventory of cultural heritage;{{Search Mérimée|80021}} and on the other hand, 187 objects listed in the inventory of monuments historiques and 254 objects listed in the general inventory of cultural heritage.{{Search Palissy|80021}} The information given below is relative only to a brief selection.Notre-Dame d'Amiens
(File:Cathédrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens-3420.jpg|thumb|right|Façade of Notre-Dame Cathedral){{pull quote|It's a lovely old woman, this Cathedral is a Virgin. ... Point of pain confusion, here, point of exaggeration or smell. It is absolutely empirical of supreme swelling.|author =Auguste Rodin {{Verify quote|date=March 2024}}}}{{pull quote|Amiens Cathedral deserves the name given by M. Viollet-le-Duc, 'the Parthenon of Gothic architecture'.|author =John Ruskin|source=The Bible of Amiens}}The city is famous for its Notre-Dame Cathedral, masterpiece of Gothic art and one of the largest cathedrals in the world by its interior volume ({{convert|200000|m3|cuft|abbr=on}}).WEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20130701164053weblink">weblink dead, 1 July 2013, Amiens, la cathédrale en couleurs, 18 June 2011, France Télévisions, 6 May 2013, The largest religious and medieval building of France, its interior could twice hold Notre Dame de Paris.WEB,weblink Cathédrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens, Guide du routard, 6 May 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131112000146weblink">weblink 12 November 2013, dead, The cathedral measures {{convert|145|m|ft}} long and its spire rises {{convert|112|m|ft}} high. The vaults of the central nave, finished in 1247, are {{convert|42.3|m|ft}}, close to the maximum limit for this architecture.Dating back to the 13th century, its construction is due to the wealth of the city in the Middle Ages and to the fire of the Romanesque cathedral which stood previously. Three architects, including Robert of Luzarches succeeded to complete the construction.Amiens Cathedral is notable for the coherence of its plan, the beauty of its three-tier interior elevation, the particularly fine display of sculptures on the principal façade and in the south transept, and inlays of its floor. It is also described by John Ruskin as "Gothic, clear of Roman tradition and of Arabian taint, Gothic pure, authoritative, unsurpassable, and unaccusable."Regarded as the archetype of the classic Gothic style, the cathedral also presents some elements of the radiant Gothic style and flamboyant Gothic. The speed of construction, barely 70 years for the shell (1220 to 1269), explains this remarkable homogeneity of style. Its façade is decorated with more than 3,000 statues, gargoyles and chimeras.Registered since 1981 as a World Heritage Site of UNESCO, it is a "masterpiece of world heritage". For a second time in 1998, it is a monumental step on the Camino de Santiago. Despite the two World Wars of the 20th century, which severely affected the city, it managed to stay intact.A show of the reproduction of the original polychromyUnlike most cathedrals in France, Notre Dame Amiens has substantially retained all of its original statues and ornaments, which even today allows one to admire some of the colours used in Middle Ages. of façades, discovered as a result of recent laser cleaning, is given annually for free in December and during the summer period. The show is a projection on the façade of slides in color.The {{interlanguage link|Zodiaque de la cathédrale d'Amiens|fr|3=Zodiaque de la cathédrale d'Amiens|lt=zodiac}} is a set of reliefs on the foundations of the western façade formed series of quatrefoil medallions, carved in a representative agrarian calendar and the signs of the zodiac.The statue of the {{interlanguage link|L'Ange pleureur|fr|3=L'Ange pleureur|lt=weeping Angel}} that is on a tomb carved by {{interlanguage link|Nicolas Blasset|fr}}, and the reliefs evoking Saint-Firmin and St. John the Baptist, are some of the well-known works of the cathedral.At ground level lies the intact {{interlanguage link|Labyrinthe de la cathédrale d'Amiens|fr|3=Labyrinthe de la cathédrale d'Amiens|lt=labyrinth}} of {{convert|234|m|ft}} long.On the north side of the cathedral is the former {{interlanguage link|Palais de l'évêché d'Amiens|fr|3=Palais de l'évêché d'Amiens|lt=Palace of the Bishop of Amiens}}, occupied by the {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure de commerce d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãcole supérieure de commerce d'Amiens|lt=Ãcole supérieure de commerce}} in Amiens.Cathédrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens.jpg|The cathedral seen from the Rue AndréAmiens cathédrale (les 3 portails Ouest) 1.jpg|West entranceAmiens cathédrale4.JPG|EntranceAmiens Cathedral Interior 1.jpg|The labyrinthAmiens Cathedral choir Wikimedia Commons.jpg|The choirStalles Cathédrale d'Amiens 280808 12.jpg|ColumnsMausolée de Charles de Vitry Amiens 110608 3.jpg|Mausoleum of Charles de VitryTombeau du chanoine Lucas Amiens Ange pleureur130608 .jpg|Tomb of Canon LucasBelfry
(File:Le Beffroi Amiens FRA 001.jpg|thumb|right|The belfry of Amiens){{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Belfry of Amiens|fr|3=Beffroi d'Amiens}}}}The origin of the Belfry of Amiens dates back to the establishment of the commune of Amiens by Louis VI. It is mentioned for the first time in an arbitral award issued by the chapter of Amiens in 1244.Symbolizing the independence of the commune, it was formerly used for meetings of the notables of the city and then as archive rooms, weapons store and prison. A spotter nearby monitored arrivals and warned the population of the external dangers. During the Middle Ages, the building was repeatedly engulfed by fire.The belfry is composed of a base in white cut stone, built in the 15th century between 1406 and 1410, a stone superstructure bell tower built from 1749 with Baroque volutes at its base, and a dome covered with slate and then the renowned arrow weather vane. At the time, a huge 11-ton bell was installed inside, it was later destroyed along with the dome, whose copper component melted, in the bombardment and fire of the city on 19 May 1940. Abandoned and devoid of a roof since World War II, the monument was fully restored between February 1989 and July 1990.Located on the Place au Fil, the old central square of the city before the arrival of the railway and the rise of the Rue des Trois Calloux, the belfry is adjacent to Les Halles and the back of the city hall.{{Base Mérimée|PA00116043}} At a height of {{convert|52|m|ft}}, it rings every hour of the day.Since July 2005, the belfry of Amiens is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, as part of a set of 56 Belfries of Belgium and France which were inscribed because of their architecture and their importance in the rise of municipal power in Northern France and Belgium.WEB,weblink Belfries of Belgium and France, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, 5 November 2021, The belfry is also recorded in the inventory of Historic Monuments.Cirque Jules-Verne
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Cirque Jules-Verne|fr}}}}(File:Cirque Amiens foule début XXe.jpg|thumb|left|The municipal circus of Amiens in 1912, on the festival of Saint Jean.)(File:Cirque municipale amiens.jpg|thumb|The municipal circus of Amiens in 2006.)In 1845, the traditional fair of Saint-Jean, formerly held at Place René Goblet, was transferred to Place Longueville. It is a wide esplanade that took the place of the Longueville bastion, after the demolition of the city walls in the early 19th century. Each year, a temporary circus is established for this occasion.In 1865, a circus company emerged to claim a permanent circus, which would be built in wood by the Schytte contractor in 1874. However, expensive maintenance prompted the municipality to consider the construction of a new building. The decision was made in 1886 under the leadership of Mayor Frédéric Petit and the work began.The Chief Architect of the Somme, {{interlanguage link|Ãmile Ricquier|fr}}, a disciple of Gustave Eiffel, was responsible for its construction. It was inspired by the Cirque d'hiver of Paris but with a cast metal frame, supplemented by brick from the local countryside. The architect of civil buildings, Charles Garnier, claimed that the frames should be hidden with a plaster imitating stone. The "moderninst" design of Ricquier, who chose to display the structure, and to favor local material such as brick, is visible at the rear of the monument.With its 16-sided polygonal shape and a diameter of {{convert|44|m|ft}}, it includes lodges and stalls in its enclosure. As a completely modern project, it hosted two steam engines, dedicated to fully electric lights and central heating. Since its construction, it was also the first circus which included a buffet and a refreshment bar. The cost of the construction of the building finally reached double the forecast.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000169}} In 1888, the new city councilor responsible for festivals and celebrations, Jules Verne, was responsible for monitoring the work, and it was he who opened it on Sunday 23 June 1889, for the opening of the fair and the centenary of the French Revolution:Jules Verne, extrait du WEB,weblink discours d'inauguration, 17 July 2023, du 23 juin 1889.{{pull quote|The new circus is a work of art that your municipal administration wanted to build with all of the enhancements of modern industry. It is the very best, undoubtedly, it is also the most comprehensive, with its facilities and equipment, to have been built in France and abroad.|author =Jules Verne}}The roof was damaged by a shell in 1916. The circus was the setting for Federico Fellini's The Clowns (1971), and the film by Jean-Jacques Beineix, Roselyne et les lions (1989), with Isabelle Pasco as lead actress. The largest of the circuses of the province with its 3,000-seats, the building has acquired a multidisciplinary use for decades of performances of theatre, dance, concerts, galas, sports and public meetings.Renovated in 2003, it now bears the name of Cirque Jules Verne. After hosting the performances of {{interlanguage link|Cirque Rancy|fr}}, it hosts resident {{interlanguage link|Cirque Arlette Gruss|fr}}.Since 1 January 2011, the circus has been labelled "national hub circus and street arts", managed by an {{interlanguage link|Ãtablissement public de coopération culturelle|fr|3=Ãtablissement public de coopération culturelle|lt=EPCC}}. It is one of seven in France and is still in use today.WEB,weblink The Cirque Jules Verne Website, Cirquejulesverne.com, 1 March 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20111012043438weblink">weblink 12 October 2011, dead,The house of Jules-Verne
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Maison de Jules Verne|fr}}}}In 1882, Jules Verne and his wife, Honorine, rented the house at the corner of Rue Charles-Dubois and Boulevard Longueville until 1900. Acquired in 1980 by the city, the house is labeled Maisons des Illustres by the Ministry of Culture. Restored in 2006, thanks to the work of the {{interlanguage link|Centre international Jules-Verne|fr}}, this 19th-century mansion, listed in the {{interlanguage link|supplementary inventory of historic monuments|fr|3=Inventaire supplémentaire des monuments historiques}}, traces through the exhibition of more than 700 objects, the personality, the sources of inspiration and memories of Jules Verne.Tour Perret
Opposite the Gare d'Amiens, is located the Tour Perret (from the name of its architect Auguste Perret). Over {{convert|100|m|ft}} high, it was one of the first skyscrapers built in Europe, and the highest for a long time.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000177}}The Church of Saint-Leu
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Leu d'Amiens|fr}}}}This church was built at the end of the 15th century, on the model of the hall-churches. It is dedicated, as its district, to Saint Leu, referring to the 7th century bishop who was exiled to the Vimeu. It has three naves. A flamboyant portal adorns the base of the steeple. The latter, struck by lightning, had to be rebuilt at the beginning of the 16th century. The ends of beams are carved. Stone and wood statues date from the 17th century. The choir houses the glory of the Duthoit brothers.Other notable buildings or monuments
Architecture from antiquity
- Numerous archaeological excavations have uncovered remains from proto-historic times to the Roman era. Two skylights cut in the last development of Place Gambetta, allow observation of a few remains of the forum. And, important remnants of a large Gallo-Roman theatre uncovered in early 2007, have been dismantled and stored in accordance with the rules of archaeological conservation, during the redevelopment of the Gare quarter in March 2007.WEB,weblink THEATRE GALLO-ROMAIN, Jacques, Lessard, 10 April 2007, 30 August 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140903170608weblink">weblink 3 September 2014,
- The archaeological garden of Saint-Acheul testifies to the presence of Paleolithic man in the Somme Valley some 450,000 years ago. A stratigraphic cut, classified as an historic monument since 1947, allows visualisation of successive strata of the Somme Valley.
Architecture from the Middle Ages
- The Church of Saint-Germain, is disused, but where exhibitions are regularly held on the colourisation of the cathedral and the St-Germain quarter, and historical competitor of the Saint-Leu quarter. The animosity, between the populations of the two districts has marked the history of Amiens. This church has a high and oddly leaning tower. Affected by the bombing of 1940, it was returned temporarily to worship in October 1965, after a thorough restoration.
- The remains of the Hôtel-Dieu (Saint-Leu district, between the {{abbr|CRDP|Centre de Recherche et de Développement Pédagogique (Centre of research and pedagogical development)}} and the Faculty of Sciences),
- The mills Passe avant and Passe arrière{{Base Mérimée|IA00076431}} (at Saint-Leu).
Architecture from the Renaissance
- The renaissance façade of the Maison du Sagittaire (moved to adjoin the Logis du Roy).
- The Logis du Roy (Faculty of Arts until 2003).{{Mérimée|PA00116069|Le logis du Roy}}
- The House of the Bailiwick or Malmaison.
- The Citadelle: First ravelin, erected north of the Montrescu gate, the fortress was located in 1531 by F. di Giorgio on the order of Francis I (Francis I gate, with sculpted salamanders). After the capture by the Spaniards and its takeover by Henry IV (1597), {{interlanguage link|Jean Errard|fr}} received the charge to rebuild the defences of the city.
Architecture from the 17th and 18th centuries
- {{interlanguage link|Abbaye Saint-Jean-des-Prémontrés d'Amiens|fr|3=Abbaye Saint-Jean-des-Prémontrés d'Amiens|lt=Abbey of Saint-Jean-des-Prémontrés of Amiens}} (cloister Dewailly)
- Abbey of Saint-Acheul (17th and 18th centuries) and the Church (built in 1760 on the vault of Fermin of Amiens)
- The water tower and fountains of Amiens (1753)
- The façade of the former theatre (now a bank). It was moved {{convert|4|m|ft}} to the line of the Rue des Trois-Cailloux.
- The façade of the {{interlanguage link|Stengel barracks|fr|3=Ancienne caserne Stengel}} (currently an apartment building)
- The {{interlanguage link|Palais de l'évêché d'Amiens|fr|3=Palais de l'évêché d'Amiens|lt=Palace of the Bishop}} of the 17th and 18th centuries.
- The Seminary of the Lazarists: located on Rue Jules-Barni, it was built between 1736 and 1741 and benefitted from several extensions of which the last was built under the aegis of {{interlanguage link|François-Auguste Cheussey|fr}} in 1828. Seized by the {{interlanguage link|State in France|fr|3=Ãtat en France|lt=State}}, following the Act of 1905, the seminary was the barracks office (named after the general assigned to the Committee of fortifications, Pierre Charles Dejean) from 1909 to 1993. During this period, it housed the headquarters of the 8th infantry division.
- The city hall (partly 18th century and partly 19th century). Made in the regional style of stone and brick, with bedrock of sandstone, and stone pavilions. On the pediment is found the statues of King Louis VI and Bishop Geoffroi, which granted freedom to Amiens in 1115.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000161}}
Architecture from the 19th century
- The Palace of Justice was built from 1865 to 1880{{Base Mérimée|PA00132918}} on the site of the Abbey of Saint-Martin-les-Jumeaux (1073 to 1634) established at the supposed place of the sharing of the cloak of Saint Martin and the convent of the religious Order of the Celestines (1634 to 1781). Les Célestins, whose order was abolished in 1778, left the premises in 1881.WEB,weblink Accueil, Cour d'appel Amiens,
- Henriville quarter, including the hotel Acloque (neo-Louis XIII style) and the Saint-Martin Church (neo-Gothic, built by Louis Antoine in 1874).
- The {{interlanguage link|House of Jules Verne|fr|3=Maison de Jules Verne|lt=home of Jules Verne}},{{Base Mérimée|PA80000006}}Hélène Rochette, Maisons d'écrivains et d'artistes. Paris et ses alentours, pp.258â263, Parigramme, Paris, 2004 {{ISBN|978-2-84096-227-4}}. which was reopened after renovation, in 2006, including the present neo-Gothic dining room and antique desk. The tower was covered with an armillary sphere commissioned from artist François Schuiten, who also signed the mural extending the imaginary garden of yesteryear.
- The Madeleine Cemetery (Cimetière de la Madeleine)WEB,weblink Somme Tourism Website (in French), fr, Somme-tourisme.com, 1 March 2013, (:fr:Cimetière de La Madeleine à Amiens|Madeleine Cemetery in the French Wikipedia (in French)) contains a number of listed monuments including the sculpture on Jules Verne's Tomb. His tomb is decorated with a sculpture by Albert Roze symbolising the resurrection: Jules Verne lifting the slab to glimpse the modern world.
- {{interlanguage link|Cimetière Saint-Acheul|fr|3=Cimetière Saint-Acheul|lt=Saint-Acheul cemetery}} where various Amiens personalities are buried and where there is a domed tomb with a sculpture by Auguste Rodin.
- The Dewailly clock, by {{interlanguage link|Ãmile Ricquier|fr}} (completely redone in 1999), supplemented by the statue of Marie-sans chemise of Albert Roze, originally in the Place Gambetta.
- The former insurance house, Rue Marotte, built by E. Ricquier in 1893 (now a bar).
- The {{interlanguage link|Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole|fr|3=Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole|lt=Louis Aragon library}}, Rue de la République, built by {{interlanguage link|François-Auguste Cheussey|fr}} in 1823, neoclassical style with a peristyle with columns in Tuscan drums.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000172}}
- The monastery of the visitation, built between 1839 and 1841 by Herbault.
- The Palace of Justice, new buildings constructed by Cheussey in 1834 and 1846.
- The renovations by Cheussey (1816â1848) of the cathedral.
- Place Saint-Denis (now place René Goblet) is designed in 1839 by the architect François Auguste Cheussey.
- The parish church Saint-Firmin-le-Martyr by Cheussey in 1843.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000142}}
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Sainte-Anne d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Sainte-Anne d'Amiens|lt=Church of Sainte-Anne}} of the architect {{interlanguage link|Victor Delefortrie|fr}}.
- The {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Rémi d'Amiens|fr|3=Ãglise Saint-Rémi d'Amiens|lt=Church St-Rémi}} of architect {{interlanguage link|Victor Delefortrie|fr|3=Victor Delefortrie|lt=Paul Delefortrie}}.
Architecture from the 20th century
- The hotel Bouctot-Vagniez (seat of the Regional Chamber of commerce and industry), built by Louis Duthoit in 1909, a rare Art Nouveau building in Amiens.{{Base Mérimée|PA00116058}}
- The English quarter, located on the road from Longueau, including a British phone box. An island of London in the heart of Amiens.
- The ESIEE Amiens, designed by the architects Jean Dubus and Jean-Pierre Lott. A modern building identified by its saucer.
- Complex of Art Deco buildings on Rue Cauvin, as well as the Gueudet garages{{Base Mérimée|IA80000165}} (Rue des Otages).
- Ãglise Saint-Honoré, rebuilt between 1957 and 1961, by Paul Tournon, on the plans of the pontifical pavilion of the {{interlanguage link|Universal exhibition of Paris|fr|3=Expositions universelles de Paris|lt=universal exhibition in Paris}} in 1937.WEB,weblink Amiens, faubourg de Beauvais, rue Dom-Bouquet : église paroissiale Saint-Honoré, Isabelle, Barbedor, Mette, Nathalie, 1996, inventaire.picardie.fr/, 10 April 2011, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130709225042weblink">weblink 9 July 2013,
- The hotel Vagniez-Renon (current headquarters of the administrative tribunal): A former residence of Henriville, it houses a Moorish-style hydrotherapy room, designed by {{interlanguage link|Ãmile Ricquier|fr}}.
- The Saint-Pierre church, destroyed in 1940 and rebuilt in 1949 by Evrard, in glass and concrete, with a brick bell tower.
- {{interlanguage link|Le Courrier Picard|fr|3=Le Courrier Picard|lt=Le Courrier Picard}}: The headquarters of the daily life of Amiens, first Progrès de la Somme, belongs to a set of Art Deco buildings.
- The monument of Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque by Jan and Joël Martel in 1950.
- The Carmel of the Holy Spirit, on the Montjoie Hill, built in 1965 by architect {{interlanguage link|Pierre Pinsard|fr}}.
- The {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr|3=Maison de la culture d'Amiens|lt=House of culture of Amiens}}, inaugurated on 19 March 1966 by André Malraux, built by {{interlanguage link|Jean Duthilleul|fr}}.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000158}}
- The Coliséum, inaugurated on 5 January 1996, built by the architect {{interlanguage link|ANPAR|fr|3=ANPAR|lt=Pierre Parat}} (designer of the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy).
- The Stade de la Licorne, built in 1999 by architects {{interlanguage link|Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|fr|3=Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|lt=Philippe Chaix}} and Jean-Paul Morel.
Architecture from the 21st century
- The Cinema Gaumont Amiens opened in 2005. It is the work of architects {{interlanguage link|Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|fr|3=Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|lt=Philippe Chaix and Jean-Paul Morel}}. The interior decoration is the work of Christian Lacroix and artists Alain Balzac and François Michel.
- The Verrière de la place de la gare d'Amiens, also called the Canopy. It is the work of architect Claude Vasconi, known especially for the Forum des Halles in Paris. A subject of a controversy when it opened in March 2008, the canopy is designed to create a link between the pedestrian zone of the city center and the ZAC Gare la Vallée, and to become a business district of Amiens. CriticisedWEB,weblink Amiens La verrière : Une réalisation qui fait toujours débat., Presse, indéPicarde, Presse indéPicarde, 12 June 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150615220418weblink">weblink 15 June 2015, dead, for its massive and imposing area of more than {{convert|10000|m2|sqft}}, the canopy rises to {{convert|15|m|ft}} in height and is composed of pixellated glass panels created by {{interlanguage link|Bernard Pictet|fr}}.WEB,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111234536weblink">weblink dead, 11 November 2013, Bernard Pictet avec Claude Vasconi, la verrière de la gare d'Amiens, This is one of the largest canopies in Europe.
- The Zenith of Amiens by Massimiliano Fuksas, in the Renancourt quarter between the Mégacité and the Hippodrome. Construction was completed in 2008.
Environmental heritage
With {{convert|270|ha|acre}} of green space (excluding communal woodland)WEB,weblink Amiens, Ville fleurie, amiens.fr, 10 July 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130706135818weblink">weblink 6 July 2013, dead, {{convert|118300|ha|acre}} of {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=hortillonnages}}, {{convert|300|ha|acre}} of forests, {{convert|30|ha|acre}} of marshland, and its river and its streams, Amiens proves to be green and blue city.Floral City awarded the maximum score of 4 flowers in the floral contest of cities and villages of France to Amiens,WEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20131017222733weblink">weblink dead, 17 October 2013, Une 4ème fleur pour Amiens, 17 October 2013, amiens.fr, 17 October 2013, and it offers a particularly rich wooded heritage. With 38,650 trees (excluding woodland),WEB,weblink Parcs et jardins : Au fil des saisons, Stéphanie, Bescond, 14 October 2014, JDA n°733, 14 October 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150904084632weblink">weblink 4 September 2015, dead, of which 17,000 are situated on highways,WEB,weblink Les arbres â Inventaire, amiens.fr, 10 July 2013, {{dead link|date=October 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Amiens to win the national tree award. In 2014, the city ranked in the top 10 greenest cities of France.WEB,weblink Environnement: vivez-vous dans l'une des 10 villes les plus vertes de France ?, Claire, Bouleau, 19 February 2014, Challenges, 6 March 2014, Presenting itself as a city concerned with the environment, Amiens has made the link between the city and nature a central axis of its metropolitan development project called Amiens 2030.WEB,weblink Projet Métropolitain â Bilan de la deuxième phase, amiens.fr, 10 July 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111235751weblink">weblink 11 November 2013,The Hortillonages
Amiens is also known for the {{interlanguage link|hortillonnages|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens}}, gardens on small islands in over {{convert|300|ha|acre}} of marshland between the River Somme and River Avre, surrounded by a grid network of human-made canals (locally known as "rieux"). They are also known as the "floating gardens of Amiens".WEB,weblink The Visit Amiens Website, fr, Visit-amiens.com, 1 March 2013, 8 March 2012,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120308075326weblink">weblink dead, The hortillonnages are sometimes called "Little Venice of the North", because of the canals.Hortillon means market garden in Picard, and derives from the Latin hortillus, small garden. It is navigated in flat bottom boats, formerly called barque à cornet [Cornet boat], due to the very raised front, which allows the boats to easily dock on the fragile shores of the cultivated fields. It is the upstream port, located at the foot of the cathedral, where a weekly market is held on the water, although the arrival the growers by boat can only be accomplished once a year, in summer.De barco no Somme.jpg|On a boatHortillonnages_d'Amiens_230908_05.jpg|HortillonnagesAmiens_ponts_des_Hortillonnages_1.jpg|BridgesHort1.JPG|HortillonnagesHortillonnages d'Amiens 190908 Passerelle 3.jpg|BridgeAmiens_(dans_les_Hortillonnages)_1.jpg|HortillonagesAmiens_barque_des_Hortillonnages_1.jpg|BoatAmiens Metropolitan Zoo
Prior to its opening in May 1952, the {{interlanguage link|Zoo d'Amiens|fr|3=Zoo d'Amiens|lt=Amiens Zoo}} is a green space bordering the basin of the {{interlanguage link|Parc de la Hotoie|fr|3=Parc de la Hotoie|lt=Park of the Hotoie}}. It was the mayor of the time, {{interlanguage link|Maurice Vast|fr}}, who decided to develop the site in 1949. Originally intended as an entertainment venue, the zoo began its mission of conservation, education and research between 1970 and 1980. Between 1990 and 2000, the zoo was completely renovated and became a permanent member of the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA) in 2001 and the {{interlanguage link|Association nationale des parcs zoologiques|fr|3=Association nationale des parcs zoologiques|lt=National Association of Zoological Parks}} (ANPZ) in 2002. Today, there are 300 animals, representing approximately 75 species from all continents, cohabiting on {{convert|6.5|ha|acre}}.WEB,weblink Zoo Amiens Métropole, 5 April 2013, Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole, 6 April 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130509093237weblink">weblink 9 May 2013, dead, They live in environments, which are close to their natural environment, favouring their well-being. In 2014, the zoo received 161,128 visitors.WEB,weblink Le zoo rouvre le 1er février pour une saison pleine de surprises !, 27 January 2015, Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole, 8 February 2015,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150904084632weblink">weblink 4 September 2015, dead, Traditionally, entry is free on 14 July, Bastille Day.Maki vari roux Amiens.jpg|Red ruffed lemur (Varecia rubra)Gibbon Amiens 26873.jpg|Lar gibbons (Hylobates lar)Panda rouge Amiens 26871.jpg|Red panda (Ailurus fulgens)Coati roux Amiens 1.jpg|South American coati (Nasua nasua).Ãléphants d'Asie au zoo d'Amiens.jpg|Jena and Praya, the two Asian elephants (Elephas maximus).Otarie du zoo d'Amiens.jpg|California sea lion (Zalophus californianus)Manchots Amiens 02.jpg|Humboldt penguins (Spheniscus humboldti)The main parks and gardens
(File:Les principaux parcs d'Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|The principal parks and gardens in the city.){hide}columns-list|colwidth=30em|- {{interlanguage link|Parc Saint-Pierre (Amiens)|fr|3=Parc Saint-Pierre (Amiens)|lt=Parc Saint-Pierre{edih}, between the quarter of Saint-Leu and the {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=Hortillonnages}}, poumon vert de {{convert|22|ha|acre}} in the heart of the city, which was awarded the {{interlanguage link|Prix du paysage|fr}} in 2005.WEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20070630020502weblink">weblink dead, 2007-06-30, Prix du paysage 2005,
- {{interlanguage link|Parc du Grand Marais d'Amiens|fr|3=Parc du Grand Marais d'Amiens|lt=Parc du Grand Marais}}, along the Somme Canal, to the west of the city. Covering over {{convert|25|ha|acre}}, this park has many sports facilities: American football stadium, skate bowl, football field, play structures.
- {{interlanguage link|Jardin des plantes d'Amiens|fr|3=Jardin des plantes d'Amiens|lt=Jardin des plantes}} originally called the Jardin du Roy. Created in 1751, it is the oldest garden of Amiens on the Boulevard du jardin des plantes.
- Square Pierre Marie Saquez on Rue des Cordeliers
- {{interlanguage link|Parc de l'Evéché d'Amiens|fr}}, at the foot of the cathedral on Place Saint-Michel
- Jardin médiéval on Impasse Joron
- Square Beauregard on Rue Louis Thuillier
- {{interlanguage link|Parc Jean Rostand|fr}} on Rue Vulfran Warmé
- {{interlanguage link|Château de Montières|fr|3=Château de Montières|lt=Parc du Château de Montières}} on Rue Baudoin d'Ailly
- Parc du Petit Marais on the Avenue des cygnes
- Square Paul Gauguin on the Avenue de la paix
- {{interlanguage link|Parc de la Hotoie|fr}}
- Marais des trois vaches
- Parc du Château blanc, on the Route de Rouen
- {{interlanguage link|Bois Bonvallet|fr}}
- Square de la rose des vents on Rue du Docteur Fafet
- Plaine Saint Ladre
- Parc Léon Pille on Rue de l'Agrappin
- {{interlanguage link|Zoo d'Amiens|fr}} on the Esplanade de la Hotoie
- {{interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr|3=Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|lt=Cimetière de la Madeleine}}, on Rue Saint Maurice
- {{interlanguage link|Square Saint-Denis d'Amiens|fr|3=Square Saint-Denis d'Amiens|lt=Le Square Saint-Denis}}
- Square Montplaisir, on Place Joffre
- Square Aimé Césaire, on Boulevard de Belfort
- {{interlanguage link|Clos Alexandre (Amiens)|fr|3=Clos Alexandre (Amiens)|lt=Clos Alexandre}}, jardin floral et paysager privé
- {{interlanguage link|Cimetière Saint-Acheul|fr}}, on Rue de Cagny
- {{interlanguage link|Jardin archéologique de Saint-Acheul|fr}}, on Rue de Boutillerie
Cultural heritage
Museums
File:Musée de Picardie Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|Musée de PicardieMusée de Picardie- The Musée de Picardie is a key site in the history of the National Museum, since it is the first building to have been built in France to serve as a museum.Collectif, " Amiens Ville d'Art et d'Histoire â le guide ". " Musée de Picardie ", éditions du patrimoine, centre des monuments nationaux, 2007, pp.116â121. Built under the Second Empire on the model of the new Louvre of Napoleon III, it opened its doors to the public in 1867 after the visit of the emperor. Considered the French model of a 19th-century museum, it was nicknamed the "Little Louvre of the Province".WEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20130701224034weblink">weblink dead, 1 July 2013, Naissance du musée de Picardie, le " Petit Louvre " amiénois, Henri, Berlemont, Maryvonne, Pellay, 28 January 2013, encyclopedie.picardie.fr, 2 May 2013, It hosted very early rich collections which are now divided into four departments:WEB,weblink Musée de Picardie, Ville d'Amiens, 17 February 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130123130609weblink">weblink 23 January 2013, Archaeology in the basement, the Medieval art on the ground floor, fine arts on the ground floor and the first floor, and modern and contemporary art on the first floor. Rooms are also devoted to temporary exhibitions. The department of fine arts brings together paintings by Van Dyck, Jordaens, Ruysdael, El Greco, Ribera, Tiepolo, Guardi, Fragonard, Chardin, Boucher, Quentin de La Tour, Vouet, Corot and Courbet. The modern and contemporary collection is represented by Picasso, Picabia, Balthus, Dubuffet, Hélion, Bacon, Miró and Manessier. Access to the picture galleries of the first floor is by a mounumental staircase in a setting dedicated to the famous wall compositions of Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.{{Base Mérimée|IA80000175}}
- The Hotel de Berny Museum is a regional museum of local art and history. This building, typical of the Louis XIII architecture, was built in 1634 as a mansion of the treasurers of France. Property of Gérard de Berny, Senator of the Somme in the first half of the 20th century, has restored the façades and settled its collections. Located a few metres from the cathedral, this Museum of France retains an exceptional collection of woodwork, furniture and objets d'art (tapestries, ceramics, ironworks) and memories (objects and arrays) of Amiens personalities:WEB,weblink Le Musée de l'Hôtel de Berny, Ville d'Amiens, 17 February 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130123130632weblink">weblink 23 January 2013, Jules Verne, Choderlos de Laclos, Ãdouard Branly, Jean-Baptiste Gresset, Vincent Voiture, Joseph Pinchon, Maréchal Leclerc. The museum is currently undergoing a complete renovation of its buildings and an overhaul of the installation of its museum collections.
- The {{interlanguage link|House of Jules Verne|fr|3=Maison de Jules Verne}}, labeled Maisons des Illustres, is the home of the most translated writer in the world after Agatha Christie:WEB,weblink Top 50 Authors of All Time, 17 February 2013, Unesco, Index Translationum, Jules Verne. He lived here from 1882 to 1900 with his wife Honorine, and wrote part of his work in this mansion of the 19th century. To visit is to enter into the intimate and creative universe of the author. The building largely retains its original decor and opens almost all of its rooms, from the ground floor to the attic. The permanent collections are presented on two floors, in the attic, the tower and the belvedere of the house: Approximately 700 collected objects evoke the personality, sources of inspiration and memories of Jules Verne.WEB,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080914162351weblink">weblink dead, 14 September 2008, Maison de Jules Verne, Office de tourisme d'Amiens, 17 February 2013, Costumed tours, performances, parties and literary encounters of thematic conferences are also regularly organised.WEB,weblink La Maison de Jules Verne, Centre international Jules Verne, 17 February 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20121023034312weblink">weblink 23 October 2012,
- The Gallery of stained glass is located in the workshop of master glassmaker Claude Barre, in a 16th-century house near to the cathedral. It presents a large collection to the public, including religious stained-glass windows and interiors, from the 11th to the 19th century. The gallery also offers demonstrations on the techniques of stained glass.
- The {{interlanguage link|House of culture of Amiens|fr|3=Maison de la culture d'Amiens}} (MCA or MACU) was inaugurated on 19 March 1966 by André Malraux. A major {{interlanguage link|Ãtablissement public de coopération culturelle|fr|3=Ãtablissement public de coopération culturelle|lt=cultural institution}} in the region, it has two exhibition halls for contemporary art; the Matisse Hall and the Giacometti Room, which both regularly host exhibitions of sculptures, photographs and plastic arts.
- The Fonds régional d'art contemporain of Picardie (FRAC Picardie), created in 1983, aims to promote contemporary art, in particular through dissemination actions. As early as 1985, FRAC Picardie had specialised its action in the field of the design and its contemporary dimensions. It is also interested in new media, on and off paper, since artists are now working through the video medium. This has allowed it to acquire a good reputation in France and abroad.WEB,weblink FRAC Picardie, Evene.fr, 17 February 2013, In 30 years, the FRAC has brought together a unique collection of a thousand drawings which include major names of contemporary art, such as Basquiat, Dubuffet, Oppenheim, Twombly, Matta, Manessier, etc.WEB,weblink Le dessin, l'art du trait et de la ligne, Estelle, Thiébault, 2 May 2013, Courrier picard, 4 May 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111234955weblink">weblink 11 November 2013, In 2001, discussions are undertaken to construct a new building to accommodate the fonds and its collections.WEB,weblink FRAC Picardie, un projet de développement, Frac Picardie, 17 February 2013, 7 August 2012,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120807065225weblink">weblink dead,
Concert halls
The city has a number of concert spaces, mostly small venues, and pubs also host numerous concerts throughout the year.- The Zenith of Amiens was inaugurated in September 2008. With a capacity of 6,000 seats, it is the work of the Italian architect Massimiliano Fuksas.WEB,weblink Présentation : Amiens Métropole, zenith-amiens.fr, 25 January 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140202102432weblink">weblink 2 February 2014, dead, Holder of the required Zénith label, this facility allows the hosting of national and international headline acts and ensures a high level of services and organisation. The accessibility of the place by motorway (A16, A29, A1), and the possibilities of free parking, the venue radiates to Belgium and to the Paris region.WEB,weblink Comment se rendre au Zénith Amiens Métropole ?, zenith-amiens.fr, 25 January 2014,
- The {{interlanguage link|Mégacité d'Amiens|fr|3=Mégacité d'Amiens|lt=megacity}} is the Park of the Congress and Exhibitions of Amiens. Located in immediate proximity of the Zenith of Amiens and the Stade de la Licorne, there are two auditoriums of 350 and 1,000 placesWEB,weblink Mégacité, un espace performant, megacite.fr, 25 January 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140203053915weblink">weblink 3 February 2014, dead, where concerts and {{interlanguage link|Spectacle comique|fr|3=Spectacle comique|lt=comedy shows}} are programmed.
- {{interlanguage link|Cirque Jules-Verne|fr}}, the biggest grand circus of France, has about 1,700 seating spaces since its renovation in 2003. It welcomes, among other shows, concerts.
- The {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr|3=Maison de la culture d'Amiens|lt=House of culture of Amiens}} offers many live shows and concerts. It manages also New Dreams, a room for 120 seated or 300 standing, which also hosts concerts.
- The Auditorium Henri Dutilleux is the auditorium of the {{interlanguage link|Conservatoire à rayonnement régional d'Amiens|fr}}. With high acoustic quality, it offers 370 seats on three levels. It offers mainly classical concerts.
- {{interlanguage link|La Lune des Pirates|fr}} is the {{interlanguage link|Musiques actuelles|fr|3=Musiques actuelles|lt=stage of contemporary music}} (SMAC) of the city. Created in 1987 in a former banana warehouse of the Belu Wharf, La Lune has a capacity of 250 seats.
Theaters
(File:Amiens France Maison-de-la-Culture-01.jpg|thumb|right|The {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr|3=Maison de la culture d'Amiens|lt=House of Culture of Amiens}})- The {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr|3=Maison de la culture d'Amiens|lt=House of Culture of Amiens}} has the {{interlanguage link|Scène nationale|fr}} accreditation from the Ministry of Culture. Cultural place of the city, its mission is broad and covers many disciplines: theatre, music, dance, cinema and visual arts. It brings together two theatres: the Grand Théâtre (1,070 seats) and the Petit Théâtre (300 seats).
- The {{interlanguage link|Comédie de Picardie|fr}} (ComDePic) is one of the city's main theatres. This {{interlanguage link|Scène conventionnée|fr}} was founded in 1989 by the Regional Council of Picardie and offers fifteen plays every year. The theatre has a room of 400 places and houses its own company.
- The Maison du Théâtre was established in April 1988 in the historic quarter of {{interlanguage link|Saint-Leu (Amiens)|fr|3=Saint-Leu (Amiens)|lt=Saint-Leu}}. Its activities range from creation to dissemination, training and theatrical information. Focused on contemporary theatre, the Maison du Théâtre also hosts local theatrical companies and their creations.WEB,weblink Maison du Théâtre, amiens.fr, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140210043955weblink">weblink 10 February 2014,
- The puppet theatre "Chés cabotants of Amiens", founded in 1933, is the heir of some eighty cabotan theatres which were created in Amiens in the 19th century. Amiens is known as the French capital of the puppet son.WEB,weblink Chés Cabotans, marionnettes à fil, somme-tourisme.com, 25 January 2014, Since 1997, a theatre is dedicated to Chés Cabotans of Amiens and his popular hero {{interlanguage link|Lafleur (marionnette)|fr|3=Lafleur (marionnette)|lt=Lafleur}}. It is located in the heart of the Saint-Leu quarter.
- The Boîte à Rire is a café-théâtre, created in September 2012.WEB,weblink Amiens inaugure son nouveau café-théâtre : la Boîte à Rire, 21 September 2012, France Télévisions, 25 January 2014, This 48-seat hall is located near to Amiens Cathedral, and proudly displays a one-man show and Boulevard theatre.
Cultural Centers
Amiens Métropole has nine cultural centers which cover much of the metropolitan area: Six in various districts of Amiens, and three in the neighbouring communes of Longueau, Camon and Glisy. These outreach facilities working in the field of art and creation are openly oriented "venues". Open to all, they offer an eclectic programme; theatre and concerts, shows for young people and dance, projections of films, exhibitions, meetings and debates, etc. In 2013, they accommodated 48,000 people.JOURNAL,weblink Ces centres ont la culture de proximité, JDA, 706, 29 January 2014, amiens.fr, 20 April 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150904084632weblink">weblink 4 September 2015, dead,- The Briqueterie was installed in 2001 on the site of the former Friant military barracks in the Elbeuf quarter.WEB,weblink La Briqueterie, amiens.fr, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140202144726weblink">weblink 2 February 2014, As part of its programming, it hosts concerts, as well as exhibitions, public theatre and shows for youths. To this end, it has a room that can accommodate 120 people.
- The Jacques Tati cultural center is located in the heart of the Pierre Rollin.WEB,weblink Centre culturel Jacques Tati, amiens.fr, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140202150232weblink">weblink 2 February 2014, Opened in January 2008, the Jacques Tati theatre has 198 seatsWEB,weblink Le théâtre, Centre Culturel Jacques Tati, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130827190809weblink">weblink 27 August 2013, and hosts plays, public youth performances, concerts, etc.
- The Léo-Lagrange cultural center is located in Saint Germain district.WEB,weblink Centre Culturel Léo Lagrange, amiens.fr, 20 April 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140222001354weblink">weblink 22 February 2014, A venue for exhibitions, meetings and performances of music, theatre, dance and circus, it has a room of 85 seats named the chapel.
- The CSC is installed in the heart of the Etouvie quarter.WEB,weblink Centre Social et Culturel Etouvie, amiens.fr, 20 April 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140221235848weblink">weblink 21 February 2014, Its missions include the dissemination of exhibitions and performances. To this end, it has a room of 150 seats.
- The Ãtoile du sud is located in the neighbourhood Victorine-Autier. This cultural center is specialized in urban cultures and has the peculiarity of having a computer ({{abbr|MAO|Musique assistée par ordinateur (Computer music)}}) recording studio.
- The Safran is located in the north quarter of Amiens. This 'multidisciplinary and experimental' {{interlanguage link|Scène conventionnée|fr}} offers diverse programming:WEB,weblink Safran, amiens.fr, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140210115529weblink">weblink 10 February 2014, Drama, public youth shows, dance and exhibitions. Its theatre hall, known as Gérard-Philipe has 220 spaces.WEB,weblink THÃÃTRE GERARD-PHILIPE, Petit Futé, 25 January 2014, Saffron also hosts a music complex, the Cité Carter, which offers rehearsal studios, recording sessions and organises concerts of contemporary music in its 250-seat hall.WEB,weblink Cité Carter, studio d'enregistrement à Amiens (80), webrankinfo.com, 25 January 2014,
Libraries
{{hatnote|1=Main article: {{interlanguage link|Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole|fr}}}}Libraries currently constitute a network of 28 facilities spread over the whole territory of the metropolis. The heart of this network is the Louis Aragon library, located on Rue de la République. Built between 1823 and 1826, it is one of the oldest municipal libraries in France.WEB,weblink Amiens, 2 February 2012, Association des directeurs des bibliothèques municipales et intercommunales des grandes villes de France, 2 May 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111235256weblink">weblink 11 November 2013, dead, It experienced several improvements, including campaigns of work between 1982 and 1993, which have endowed it with new spaces: Two auditoriums, a youth space, a library and an art library.WEB,weblink Historique des bibliothèques, bibliotheques.amiens.fr, 2 May 2013, 10 September 2011,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20110910081255weblink">weblink dead, Registration and borrowing is free for all of the people of Amiens in all libraries. Two libraries also provide service to neighborhoods and the communes of the agglomeration, and there is home delivery of documents for people with reduced mobility.Cinemas
There are three cinemas:- The Cinema Gaumont Amiens (12 rooms, 2,700 seats) was inaugurated in September 2005. Located just steps from the Amiens railway station, it has a large lobby and a 600-seat room. A 500-space car park is located under the cinema. It is the work of the architects {{interlanguage link|Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|fr|3=Atelier d'architecture Chaix & Morel et associés|lt=Philippe Chaix and Jean-Paul Morel}} and its interior decoration was entrusted to Christian Lacroix.WEB,weblink Amiens â Cinéma Gaumont, Centre régional de documentation pédagogique d'Amiens, 25 January 2014, 1 February 2014,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140201182720weblink">weblink dead, In 2011, this multiplex received 887,000 cinemagoers.WEB,weblink AMIENS Le Gaumont, la super production de 2011, Jeanne, Demilly, 9 January 2012, Le Courrier picard, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140203203201weblink">weblink 3 February 2014,
- The Cine-Saint-Leu (one room with 250 seats) was inaugurated in October 2000,WEB,weblink Présentation : Le ciné St Leu, Ciné Saint-Leu, 25 January 2014, after the closure of the Regent Cinema located near the railway station. An arthouse cinema, it is part of the major cultural facilities of the Cathedral Centre. Its eclectic and cinephile programming offers the possibility to see the original version of contemporary films.
- The Studio Orson Welles (one room with 180 seats in the {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr}}). An arthouse cinema operated by the {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr}}, it offers arthouse films as well as retrospectives of great names of the seventh art, old or contemporary.WEB,weblink Le cinéma Orson Welles, maisondelaculture-amiens.com, 25 January 2014, dead,weblink" title="archive.today/20140126025925weblink">weblink 26 January 2014,
Cultural events and festivals
Throughout the year, Amiens is the seat of many cultural, traditional or economic events.File:Royal de luxe à Amiens en 2005.jpg|thumb|right|The Royal de luxeRoyal de luxe(File:Hortillonnagesdamiens2010.jpg|thumb|right|The Festival Art, city and landscape in the Hortillonnages)File:Amiens Cathédrale Spectacle 190908 05.jpg|thumb|right|Detail of the son et lumière show of Amiens, la cathédrale en couleurs.]](File:La Grande Réderie d'Amiens 2013.jpg|thumb|right|The Grande Réderie d'Amiens)(File:La façade de la Cathédrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens illuminée en tout couleur.JPG|thumb|right|Amiens, la cathédrale en couleurs.)(File:Fête au bord de l'eau 2013 à Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|The Fête au bord de l'eau)(File:Vue generale.jpg|thumb|right|The 13th {{interlanguage link|Rendez-vous de la bande dessinée d'Amiens|fr|3=Rendez-vous de la bande dessinée d'Amiens|lt=Rendez-Vous de la Bande Dessinée d'Amiens}} in 2008.)File:Marché de Noël d'Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|The Gilles of Binche at the inauguration of the Christmas market in 2013.]](File:Un été en musique Amiens.jpg|thumb|right|The Un été en musique event at the Jules Bocquet bandstand.){| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left;margin:1em auto"|+ Annual Events! Month! Event! Subject! Number of editions (In 2015)Music
(File:The rabeats sly flamm marcelo.JPG|thumb|right|The Rabeats)Even if it rarely achieves national notoriety (with the notable exceptions of Les Fatals Picards, {{interlanguage link|The Rabeats|fr}}, Olympe, Albin de la Simone, Disiz and Rokia Traoré), the Amiens music scene is active and developed. In this dynamic, the {{interlanguage link|Nouvelle scène rock française|fr|3=Nouvelle scène rock française|lt=New French Rock}} scene holds a central place and is organised around a collective, Amiens Burning, which is responsible for networking the breeding ground for the local rock scene, to accompany its projects, and organize concerts.WEB, Association Amiens Burning, Maison des associations d'Amiens Métropole, 19 November 2012,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130126095120weblink">weblink 26 January 2013, dead, Since their creation, {{interlanguage link|La Lune des Pirates|fr}} and Cité Carter also provide support to the local scene. For example, the Cité Carter produces a compilation each year, with local groups.WEB, Discographie de la Cité Carter, Ville d'Amiens, 20 November 2012,weblink dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120229181922weblink">weblink 29 February 2012, Here is an overview of the Amiens music scene:- Rock: The Rabeats (cover band of The Beatles), The Beyonders, Molly's, Sobo, The Void, Violent Scaredy Cats, Elegant Fall, Gene Trio
- Electro: The Name (who created the soundtrack for the series Bref), The Blue
- Pop: Olympe, Nathaniel Isaac Smog, {{interlanguage link|Ribo (band)|fr|3=Ribo|lt=Ribo}}
- Metal: Anorak, DSK, Vakarm, Decline of Humanity, Altered beast, Infected Society
- Hip Hop/Rap: Disiz (born in Amiens), D.S.C. (Dirty South Crew), Lj Crackus
- French singers: Albin de la Simone (born in Amiens), EmilieAnneCharlotte
- World Music: Rokia Traoré (Malian-born singer who lived in Amiens in the 1990s)
- Multiple genres: Les Fatals Picards, Zic Zazou (group of nine musicians created in 1982 and winner of La Grande Battle in November 2012)
Literature
Amiens saw rise, over the centuries, to major writers.Collectif, " Amiens Ville d'Art et d'Histoire â le guide ". " Vie littéraire à Amiens sous l'ancien Régime " et " La vie littéraire au siècle XIX ", éditions du patrimoine, centre des monuments nationaux, 2007, p.26 and p.35. In the first half of the 17th century, Vincent Voiture, poet and letter writer, was the darling of the Précieuses for the fluidity of his style. In 1634, he was member of the 1st Académie française. In 1678, Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange, nicknamed "the French Varro", published his Glossarium in 3 volumes. This glossary of medieval Latin is still authoritative today. In 1750, Jean Baptiste Gresset, a playwright and poet who was celebrated in his time and was a member of the Académie française, founded the {{interlanguage link|Académie des sciences, des lettres et des arts d'Amiens|fr|3=Académie des sciences, des lettres et des arts d'Amiens|lt=Academy of Amiens}} which is still active today. He was named perpetual president.In 1782, the Amiens native Choderlos de Laclos published Les Liaisons dangereuses where he staged a depraved nobility. Considered one of the masterpieces of 18th-century literature, the book has toured the world and is known as an Oscar-winning film adaptation.{{pull quote|Here I am quite citizen of Amiens. It seems to me that I was born. I live very happy, although uncomfortable to work. Amiens is a wise city, even-tempered, and the company is friendly and literate. It is near Paris, close enough to have the highlights without unbearable noise and bustle.|author =Jules Verne}}(File:Firma de Julio Verne.svg|thumb|right|The signature of Jules Verne)In the 19th century, there was a brilliant literary life around the {{interlanguage link|Académie des sciences, des lettres et des arts d'Amiens|fr}} with historian Albéric de Calonne and the Yvert family. However, the great name of Amiens literary life is Jules Verne. He animated all intellectual activity, giving balls and parties, while his wife held a famous salon. He often attended the library of the industrial society, which subscribed to numerous scientific journals. A member of the Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Amiens from 8 March 1872, he was elected Director in 1875, and in 1881 and, on this occasion, he delivered several speeches of welcome, especially for one of his friends, Amiens cartoonist {{interlanguage link|Gédéon Baril|fr}}, who signed illustrations of {{interlanguage link|Dix heures en chasse|fr}} with Hetzel. Engaged in local life, he was Councillor of Amiens from 1888 to 1904. He was closely interested in the affairs of the city, wrote many reports on the theatre and brought its support to the construction of the {{interlanguage link|Cirque Jules-Verne|fr|3=Cirque Jules-Verne|lt=municipal circus}}.Amiens does appear explicitly in his novels but there are however characteristic elements of the city such as the cathedral and the river. This is the case, for example, for the imaginary city of Ragz in Le secret de Wilhem Storitz. In the novel Une fantaisie du docteur Ox, the inhabitants of the fictional town of Virgamen, the Virgamenois, refer directly to the Amiénois and their prudent nature.WEB,weblink Dans les pas de Jules Verne à Amiens, Anne-Marie, Cojez, 7 August 2009, encyclopedie.picardie.fr, 16 March 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130410144330weblink">weblink 10 April 2013, dead, In 1875, he delivered before the Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts of Amiens a speech entitled "An ideal city: Amiens in the year 2000" where he portrays himself wandering in a forward-thinking city of Amiens. Since then, the city has built a tourist route from this text.He died in Amiens in 1905, and he deeply marked the town's footprint, so that today many places, monuments and events bear his name. He rests at {{interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr|3=Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|lt=La Madeleine cemetery}} where one can read on his tomb: Vers l'immortalité et l'éternelle jeunesse. [Towards immortality and eternal youth].{{pull quote|Such as it is with his distinctive smile, how much I love the Golden Virgin, with her smile of heavenly hostess; how much I love its home at the door of the Cathedral in its adornment exquisite and simple of hawthorns.|author =Marcel Proust (about the portal of the Virgin Golden of the Cathedral of Amiens)}}In 1885, Englishman John Ruskin published the Bible of Amiens, which was translated into French, extensively annotated and prefaced, in 1904, by Marcel Proust. This book dedicated to Notre-Dame d'Amiens was the opportunity for Proust to recall his admiration for the English author and the Cathedral of Amiens.{{pull quote|I would like to give the reader the desire and the means to spend a day at Amiens in a sort of Ruskinesque pilgrimage. It was not worth starting by asking him to go to Florence or Venice, when Ruskin wrote a whole book on Amiens.|author =Marcel Proust}}In the second half of the 19th century, {{interlanguage link|Jules Barni|fr}}, {{interlanguage link|List of députés of the Somme|fr|3=Liste des députés de la Somme|lt=Member of Parliament for the Somme}}, Associate Professor of philosophy and brilliant scholar translated Kant's work in French and thus enabled its dissemination in France.A native of Amiens, Paul Bourget published Le Disciple in 1889, a novel today considered his major work. He was elected, 5 years later, to the Académie française.Born in Sainte-Anne district in 1885, Roland Dorgelès published {{interlanguage link|Les Croix de bois|fr|3=Les Croix de bois|lt=Les Croix de bois}} in 1919. A masterpiece written from his notes taken at the Front, the novel won the Prix Femina the same year. Though capable of obtaining the Prix Goncourt, it was beaten by {{interlanguage link|à l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs|fr}} by Marcel Proust, 6 votes against 4. A member of the Académie Goncourt in 1929, he was elected president in 1954 until his death in 1973.WEB,weblink Roland Dorgeles, Jean-Louis, Andreani, Les éditions du trotteur ailé, 16 March 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130409033153weblink">weblink 9 April 2013, dead, In 1926, the Amiens native Henri Deberly, won the Prix Goncourt with {{interlanguage link|Le Supplice de Phèdre|fr}}, a novel inspired by his home city.Cinema
Several films or scenes from films were shot in Amiens and its surroundings.WEB,weblink Liste des films tournés en Picardie, ACAP Pôle Image Picardie, 4 December 2012, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130903022406weblink">weblink 3 September 2013,- 1946: Jéricho by Henri Calef with Nadine Alari, Pierre Brasseur and Jacques Charon
- 1959: Head Against the Wall, film of Georges Franju, with Pierre Brasseur and Jean-Pierre Mocky
- 1970: The Clowns of Federico Fellini around the {{interlanguage link|Cirque Jules-Verne|fr}}
- 1973: La Rose de Fer of Jean Rollin with Françoise Pascal, Hugues Quester and Nathalie Perrey
- 1976: (La Saga des Français: La Rumeur), film of Michel Pamart and Marcel Trillat
- 1980: La femme enfant, film of Raphaële Billetdoux, with Klaus Kinski
- 1989: Roselyne et les lions of Jean-Jacques Beineix, with Isabelle Pasco filmed around Cirque Jules-Verne
- 1991: Walking a Tightrope of Nico Papatakis, with Michel Piccoli also filmed around Cirque Jules-Verne
- 1994: Sister My Sister of Nancy Meckler with Julie Walters and Joely Richardson
- 1997: Arlette of Claude Zidi, with Josiane Balasko and Christopher Lambert
- 1999: Je suis né d'une cigogne, film of Tony Gatlif, with Romain Duris
- 2000: Elle et lui au 14e étage of {{interlanguage link|Sophie Blondy|fr}}, with Guillaume Depardieu and Benoît MagimelTour PerretSaint-Leu quarter
- 2000: {{interlanguage link|Confort moderne (film)|fr|3=Confort moderne (film)|lt=Confort moderne}} of {{interlanguage link|Dominique Choisy|fr}}
- 2002: Carnage of Delphine Gleize
- 2002: Paris selon Moussa, film of Cheik Doukouré
- 2008: Paul Rondin est...Paul Rondin, short film of Frédéric Vin, with {{interlanguage link|François Berland|fr}}
- 2008: Blanche, short film of Eric Griffon du Bellay, with Romane Bohringer and Clémence Poésy
- 2008: Louise Hires a Contract Killer, film of Gustave Kervern and Benoît Delépine, with Yolande Moreau and Benoît Poelvoorde filmed around the Tour Bleue (before its destruction), in the Ãtouvie quarter.
- 2008: Française, film of {{interlanguage link|Souad El-Bouhati|fr}}, with Hafsia Herzi
- 2009: Ricky of François Ozon with Alexandra Lamy
- 2010: Copacabana, film of Marc Fitoussi, with Isabelle Huppert
- 2012: {{interlanguage link|Les Fraises des bois|fr|3=Les Fraises des bois|lt=Les Fraises des bois}}, film of {{interlanguage link|Dominique Choisy|fr}}
- 2013: {{interlanguage link|La Tête la première|fr|3=La Tête la première|lt=La Tête la première}}, film of Amélie Van Elmbt
Comics
Amiens is a stronghold of comics in France. A whole generation of designers and Amiens writers make the city an important creative center of the 9th art. The main actors in this generation, include {{interlanguage link|Régis Hautière|fr}}, {{interlanguage link|Norédine Allam|fr}} who notably led the recolouring of the 33 Asterix albums in the framework of the project "The great collection" and also {{interlanguage link|Antoine Dodé|fr}}, {{interlanguage link|David François (comic artist)|fr|3=David François (dessinateur)|lt=David François}}, Fraco, {{interlanguage link|Hardoc|fr}}, Greg Blondin, Nicolas Hitori De, etc.WEB,weblink Amiens, ville de BD, Christian, Larrède, January 2012, Amiens Forum, 10 January 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160319133043weblink">weblink 19 March 2016, dead, The city was also the birthplace or home of big names in the comic strip universe, such as the Amiens native Joseph Pinchon, creator of the character of Bécassine; Paul Gillon, winner of the Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême and also {{interlanguage link|Philippe Thirault|fr}}.Actor of this dynamic around the {{abbr|BD|Bande dessinée (comic strip)}}, the association On a marché sur la bulle [Explorers on the bubble] organises the {{interlanguage link|Rendez-vous de la bande dessinée d'Amiens|fr}}, one of the greatest French comic book festivals.WEB,weblink Faites des bulles!, 15 May 2007, Collectif des habitants de Thiers/Thève, 10 January 2013, Active throughout the territory, the structure also manages a resource center and has an editorial department with the {{interlanguage link|Ãditions de la Gouttière|fr}}.Regional culture
{{hatnote|1=Main articles: Picard language and {{interlanguage link|Literature in Picard|fr|3=Littérature en picard}}}}- Chés Cabotans d'Anmien or the Cabotins of Amiens is a small Picardy traditional puppet theatre founded in 1933. {{interlanguage link|Lafleur (marionnette)|fr|3=Lafleur (marionnette)|lt=Lafleur}}, the hero, was created around 1811 at {{interlanguage link|Saint-Leu (Amiens)|fr|3=Saint-Leu (Amiens)|lt=Saint-Leu}}. He talks in Picard, exclusively. Traditionally a lackey costume (wearing a red velvet tricorne hat) dressed, Lafleur is cheerful, dynamic, independent and resourceful; its motto is: "bin mier, bin boere, pis did rin foere!" (Drink well, eat well and then do nothing).
- The Picard language is recognised regional language. It is spoken in France in the Picardy and Nord-Pas-de-Calais regions, and in Belgium in the Province of Hainaut. Various associations work for the promotion and development of Picardy culture expressed in theatre, song, in spoken tales but also in writing: Novels, journals, poetry, etc. Since 1993, the Regional Council of Picardy has developed within the "Office Culturel Régional de Picardie" a cultural policy for the language and the Picardy culture. "The Agency for Picard", created in 2008, is headquartered in Amiens.WEB,weblink DRAVIE.net, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160303220021weblink">weblink 3 March 2016, Picard is taught at the University of Amiens.
- The blasons populaires are surnames or the nicknames given to the inhabitants of cities and the Picardy villages. These surpitchets sometimes come from the history of the city, sometimes a verbal game, sometimes through a mockery of people. The nickname of the inhabitants of Amiens is: Chés Maqueus d'gueugues d'Anmien [Amiens nut eaters] in reference to an episode of the Spanish invasion. On 11 March 1597, the Spanish armies developed a ploy to seize the city: The soldiers of Hernán Tello de Portocarrero, Governor of Doullens, disguised as peasants, came to the gates of the walls with nuts. The starving citizens of Amiens opened the doors and the Spaniards took the city.
Gastronomic specialities
During December, the town hosts the largest Christmas market in northern France.BOOK, Hugh McKnight, Cruising French Waterways, Sheridan House, Inc., 1 September 2005, 35, 9781574092103,weblink Amiens, in the image of the Picardy region, has a rich gastronomic heritage.{{citation|url=weblink|title= Cuisine en Picardie|publisher= Cuisine à la française|access-date= 10 December 2012|archive-url=weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20121214172446weblink">weblink|archive-date= 14 December 2012|url-status= dead}} Here are some of the specialities:WEB,weblink L'Amiénois, Frédéric, Zégierman, keldelice.com, 29 April 2013, Amiens is known for a few local foods, including "macarons d'Amiens", small, round-shaped biscuit-type macaroons made from almond paste, fruit and honey, which were first recorded in 1855;BOOK, Nick Rider, Short Breaks Northern France, New Holland Publishers, 1 May 2005, 135, 9781860111839,weblink {{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} {{interlanguage link|Tuile d'Amiens au chocolat|fr|3=Tuile d'Amiens au chocolat|lt="tuiles amienoises"}}, chocolate and orange curved "tuiles" or biscuits; {{interlanguage link|Pâté de canard d'Amiens|fr}} â duck pâté in pastry, made since the 17th century;BOOK, Michelin, Michelin Green Guide Northern France & Paris Region, Michelin, 16 April 2010, 62, 9781906261887,weblink and "la ficelle Picarde", an oven-baked cheese-topped crêpe with ham and mushroom filling,BOOK, Russel Cousins, Ron Hallmark, Ian Pickup, Studying and Working in France: A Student Guide, Manchester University Press ND, 15 December 1994, 111, 9780719042201,weblink then topped with fresh cream flavoured with nutmeg, white pepper, and sprinkled with grated cheese before being browned in the oven. The region is also known for "flamiche aux poireaux", a puff pastry tart made with leeks and cream.BOOK, Alan Rogers, Alan Rogers France 2007, Alan Rogers Guides Ltd, 1 January 2007, 88, 9780955048647,weblink Other dishes include:{hide}columns-list|colwidth=30em|- The soup des hortillons: A spring soup which, as its name suggests, originated in the {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr|3=Hortillonnages d'Amiens|lt=hortillonnages{edih} and their vegetable wealth.
- The bisteu or bigalan: Potatoes, onions and bacon pie.
- The {{interlanguage link|Andouillette amiénoise|fr}}: Pork dumpling mixed with a panade and onions.
- {{interlanguage link|Beignet d'Amiens|fr}} so-called pets d'âne [donkey pets]: Small round doughnuts and fried fresh goat's cheese and beef marrow.
- The {{interlanguage link|Gâteau battu|fr}}: Golden yellow brioche crumbs with an aerated texture. It is rich in eggs and butter.
- The galopin: A French toast made from brioche bread cooked like a big pancake.
- The Picardy rabotte: Apple wrapped and baked in a puff pastry.
- The Dariole of Amiens: A popular pastry from the 18th century, topped with a cream with almonds.
- Amiens barley sugar.
Notable people
File:0 Saint Pierre l'Ermite - Amiens.JPG|thumb|170px|Statue of Gédéon de Forceville|fr}}, near to the cathedral.File:Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset.jpeg|thumb|170px|Jean-Baptiste GressetJean-Baptiste GressetFile:Laclos.jpg|thumb|right|170px|Choderlos de Laclos ]]File:Jules Verne.jpg|thumb|170px|Jules VerneJules VerneFile:Oliver Blanchard, IMF 98BlanchardWEO1 lg.jpg|thumb|170px|Olivier BlanchardOlivier BlanchardFile:Jean-Pierre Pernaut Nathalie Marquay.jpg|thumb|170px|Jean-Pierre PernautJean-Pierre PernautFile:Portrait de Laurent Delahousse.jpg|thumb|170px|Laurent DelahousseLaurent DelahousseFile:Emmanuel Macron in Tallinn Digital Summit. Welcome dinner hosted by HE Donald Tusk. Handshake (36669381364) (cropped 2).jpg|thumb|170px|Emmanuel MacronEmmanuel MacronFile:Portrait Najat Vallaud-Belkacem-crop.jpg|thumb|170px|The minister Najat Vallaud-BelkacemNajat Vallaud-Belkacem{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|- Magnentius (303â353), usurper of the imperial title 18 January 350 to 11 August 353
- Godeberta (640â670), nun and abbess, patron saint of Noyon, France
- Ansgar (801â865), known as Oscar or Ansgar, evangeliser of Scandinavia. Ansgar is the patron saint of Denmark
- Peter the Hermit (?â1115), preacher in the First Crusade.EB1911, Peter the Hermit, 21, Barker, Ernest
, Ernest Barker, 294–295, 1,
- {{interlanguage link|André d'Ypres|fr}}, (before 1428â1450), painter and illuminator; {{Interlanguage link|La Crucifixion du Parlement de Paris|fr|3=La Crucifixion du Parlement de Paris|lt=La Crucifixion du Parlement de Paris}} is attributed to him
- Simon Marmion (1425â1489), painter and illuminator
- {{Interlanguage link|Michel de Vascosan|fr}} (1500â1576), {{Interlanguage link|imprimer du roi|fr|3=imprimeur du roi|lt=king's printer}} and the University of Paris, bookseller
- Jean Bullant (1515â1578), architect notably of the Château d'Ãcouen
- François Dubois (1529â1584), painter
- {{Interlanguage link|Jean Riolan the Elder|fr|Jean Riolan}} (1539â1605), physician, professor of anatomy and Dean of the {{Interlanguage link|Faculté de médecine de Paris|fr}}
- {{Interlanguage link|François de Louvencourt|fr}} (1569â1638), writer, poet and historian
- Nicolas Cornet (1592â1663), Catholic theologian who was one of the main opponents of Jansenism
- Vincent Voiture (1597â1648), known as " le bel esprit " [the beautiful spirit], poet of Un Précieux and academic.EB1911, Voiture, Vincent, 28, 177, 1,
- {{Interlanguage link|Nicolas Blasset|fr}} (1600â1659), sculptor
- Antoine de Cousu (beginning of the 17thâ1658), music theorist and composer of church music
- Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange (1610â1688), historian and philologist.EB1911, Du Cange, Charles du Fresne, Sieur, 8, 627–628, 1,
- Claude François, known in religion as Brother Luc, (1614â1685), painter
- Jacques Rohault (1618â1672), physician and proselyte of Mechanism
- Nicolas Barré (1621â1686), religious, beatified in 1999 by John Paul II.WEB,weblink Consacré à Nicolas Barré, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20151016132704weblink">weblink 16 October 2015,
- Charles Aubert de La Chesnaye, (1632â1702), businessman the richest and largest landowner of New France
- Charles Varlet known as La Grange, (1639â1692), comedian who belonged to Molière's company and was one of the most renowned
- Charles Cressent (1685â1768), master cabinetmaker, main representative of Regency style
- {{Interlanguage link|Jean-Baptiste Dupuis|fr}} (1698â1790), sculptor
- Jean-Baptiste Gresset (1709â1777), poet and dramatist, (author of {{Interlanguage link|Vert-Vert (poem)|fr|3=Vert-Vert|lt=Vert-Vert}} and Le Méchant), member of the Académie française.EB1911, Gresset, Jean Baptiste Louis, 12, 583, 1,
- Jean-Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval (1715â1789), officer and engineer who reformed the field artillery of the French army.EB1911, Gribeauval, Jean Baptiste de, 12, 456–789, 1,
- Père Féry (1716â1773), engineer of the château-d'eau
- Joseph Dinouart (1716â1786), preacher, polemicist, compiler of sacred sciences and apologist for French feminism
- Noël François de Wailly (1724â1801), grammarian and lexicographer.EB1911, Wailly, Noël François de, 28, 245–246, 1,
- {{Interlanguage link|Louis Antoine Vimeux|fr}} (1737â1814), general of the Revolution and First Empire, Knight of the Royal order and military of Saint-Louis, Commander of the Légion d'honneur, hereditary baron, Governor of the Place de Luxembourg (from 1802 to 1814)
- {{Interlanguage link|Jacques-Firmin Vimeux|fr}} (1740â1728), sculptor in the Cathedral of AmiensDictionnaire des sculpteurs de l'école française au siecle XVIII, Stanislas Lami
- Choderlos de Laclos (1741â1803), writer, author of Les Liaisons dangereuses
- {{Interlanguage link|Pierre Morand du Puch cadet|fr}}, (1742â1822), general of the armies of the Revolution, died in Amiens
- Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre (1749â1822), mathematician, astronomer, historian of astronomy, geodesist and author of the definition of the metre.EB1911, Delambre, Jean Baptiste Joseph, 7, Clerke, Agnes Mary, Agnes Mary Clerke, 942–943, 1,
- {{Interlanguage link|Charles Dallery|fr}} (1754â1835), mechanical engineer, inventor of the steam engine to tubular boiler
- {{Interlanguage link|Jacques-Polycarpe Morgan|fr}} (1759â1843), general of the armies of the Republic and the Empire, born in Amiens and died at Chamarande (Essonne)
- Charles Guillaume Alexandre Bourgeois (1759â1832), painter, engraver, physicist and chemist
- Pierre Amable Jean-Baptiste Trannoy (1772â1833), botanist, physician and hygienist
- {{Interlanguage link|François Marie Clément de La Roncière|fr}} (1773â1854), general of the armies of the Republic and the Empire (name engraved under the Arc de Triomphe of the Star: 11th column)
- Pierre-François-Marie-Auguste Dejean (1780â1847), general and entomologist
- {{Interlanguage link|François-Alexandre Desprez|fr}} (1778â1833), general of the armies of the Republic and the Empire
- Charles Alexandre (1797â1870), hellenist and lexicographer
- {{Interlanguage link|Gédéon de Forceville|fr}} (1799â1886), sculptor
- Pierre Thuillier, (1799â1859), landscape painter associated with the Barbizon school
- Aimé and Louis Duthoit (1803â1869) & (1807â1874), sculptors who helped the restoration of the cathedral alongside Eugène Viollet-le-Duc which qualified them for this "last image of the Middle Ages"
- Alphonse Sagebien (1807â1892), engineer, inventor of a type of water wheel, alderman from 1878 to 1888
- {{Interlanguage link|Ãdouard Paris|fr}} (1814â1874), translator in Picard of the Gospel of Matthew
- Antoine Daveluy, (1818â1866), Catholic saint, missionary Bishop in Korea
- {{Interlanguage link|Jules Barni|fr}} (1818â1878), philosopher and politician, Member of Parliament for the Somme
- Eugène Jolibois (1819â1896), politician
- Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (1824â1898), painter, idealistic murals (Panthéon, Sorbonne).EB1911, Puvis de Chavannes, Pierre Cécile, 22, Frantz, Henri
, 673, 1,
- Ferdinand Pouy (1824â1891), bibliographer died in Amiens
- Albert Dauphin (1827â1898), politician, Minister of Finance in the {{interlanguage link|Government of René Goblet|fr|3=Gouvernement René Goblet}}
- René Goblet (1828â1905), journalist and politician, head of the Government, President of the Council, Minister of) the Interior in the {{Interlanguage link|Second Government of Charles de Freycinet|fr|3=Gouvernement Charles de Freycinet (2)}}, Minister for Foreign Affairs in the {{Interlanguage link|Government of Charles Floquet|fr|3=Gouvernement Charles Floquet}}>EB1911, Goblet, René, 12, 169, 1,
- Jules Verne (1828â1905), city councillor from 1888 to his death, and before all a writer known to all; he rests in the {{Interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr|3=Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|lt=Cemetery of La Madeleine}}He lived for 18 years in a mansion located in Henriville, which includes an observatory atop a tower. His house, now classified as an Historical Monument, was acquired by the city of Amiens in 1980. Reopened on 24 March 2006 after a year of work, the Jules Verne House is a museum. The University of Picardie is called "Jules Verne". A viaduct east of the city and a lecture hall of ESIEE also bear his name.EB1911, Verne, Jules, 27, 1030, 1,
- Charles Tellier (1828â1913), inventor of artificial refrigeration
- {{Interlanguage link|Gédéon Baril|fr}} (1832â1906), cartoonist
- Frédéric Petit (1836â1895), Mayor of Amiens and Third Republic Senator of the Somme
- Ãdouard Lucas (1842â1891), inventor of mathematical games and puzzles
- Ãdouard Branly (1844â1940), physicist, inventor of the coherer, the first very sensitive detector of radio waves and physician. A high school as well as a lecture hall, one of the ESIEE, bear his name
- {{Interlanguage link|Victorine Autier|fr}} (1840â1874), heroic nurse of the War of 1870
- Paul Bourget (1852â1935), writer and member of the Académie française.EB1911, Bourget, Paul Charles Joseph, 4, 331–332, 1,
- Georges Picquart (1854-1914), general, Minister of War and French politician. He played a central role in the Dreyfus affair and provides evidence of the innocence of Alfred Dreyfus.
- Louis Thuillier (1856â1883) physicist and biologist, born and studied at Amiens, buried in the cemetery of La Madeleine
- Albert Roze (1861â1952), sculptor
- Eugène Cosserat (1866â1931) mathematician and astronomer
- Lucien Lecointe (1867â1940), politician
- Mathilde Auguez (1858â1955), light soprano
- {{Interlanguage link|Victor Pauchet|fr}} (1869â1936), surgeon; a clinic founded in 1896 and a square bear his name
- Victor-Ferdinand Bourgeois (1870â1957), painter and illustrator.WEB,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111234826weblink">weblink dead, 11 November 2013, Biographie de Victor-Ferdinand Bourgeois,
- Joseph Pinchon (1871â1953), cartoonist, creator of Bécassine
- Auguste Sérieyx (1865â1949), musicologist, composer
- Germaine Dulac (1882â1942), film director, film theorist
- Henri Deberly (1882â1947), writer, winner of the Prix Goncourt in 1926
- Clovis Brunel (1884â1971), philologist
- Roland Dorgelès (1885â1973), writer
- Clovis Trouille (1889â1975), painter
- Alphonse Métérié (1887â1967), poet
- Jean Catelas (1894â1941), member of Amiens in 1936, guillotined on 24 September 1941, under the regime of Philippe Pétain
- Alfred Georges Regner (1902â1987), painter, engraver
- Odette Hallowes (1912â1995), World War II heroine
- {{Interlanguage link|Léon Lamotte|fr}} (1912â2011), sculptor
- François Spoerry (1912â1999), architect, originally behind the construction of the tower created by Auguste Perret in Amiens
- Dolorès Vanetti (1912â2008), actress, poet
- Madeleine Michelis (1913â1944), World War II resistant
- Maurice Boitel 1919â2007, painter, lived at 65 Rue Richard de Fournival
- Jeanne Joulain (1920â2010), classical organist
- Florien Decodavaine (1920â1942), painter hermit, resistant during the World War II
- Philippe Pinchemel (1923â2008), geographer
- Roger Agache (1926â2011), archaeologist, pioneer of aerial archaeology
- {{Interlanguage link|Pierre Garnier|fr}}, (1928â2014), poet, creator of {{interlanguage link|Spatialism (poetry)|fr|3=Spatialisme (poésie)|lt=spatialism}}
- Jean-Jacques Perrey (1929â2016), electronic music performer, composer, and producer
- Véronique Silver (1931â2010), actress
- Michou (1931â2020), director of the Cabaret Michou in Paris
- {{Interlanguage link|Jacques Darras|fr}} (1939â), poet, essayist and translator
- Sylvain Cambreling (1948â), conductor
- Olivier Blanchard (1949â), Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund, Professor at the MIT
- {{Interlanguage link|Philippe Dessaint|fr}} (1953â), journalist, former director of FR3 Picardie
- Jean-Pierre Pernaut (1950â2022), journalist, television host
- Bernard Devauchelle (1950â), professor of medicine
- Geneviève Fioraso (1954â), Minister of Higher Education and Research in the Jean-Marc Ayrault Governments I and II, Secretary of State responsible for Higher Education and Research in the First and Second Valls Government
- {{Interlanguage link|Ivar Ch'Vavar|fr}} (1951â), creative poet of the L'Invention de la Picardie
- Ãric Carreel (1959â), engineer and entrepreneur
- Frank Berton (1962â), lawyer
- Liêm Hoang Ngoc (1964â), economist and politician
- Anne Brochet (1966â), actress
- {{Interlanguage link|Jeanne Savary|fr}} (1966â), comedian
- Ãric Berger (1969â), actor
- Philippe Leclerc (1969â), footballer
- {{Interlanguage link|Pierre Notte|fr}} (1969â), playwright, Director and former Secretary general of the Comédie-Française
- Albin de la Simone (1970â), musician, singer-songwriter
- Emmanuel Macron (1977â), President of France
- Najat Vallaud-Belkacem (1977â), Minister of Women's Affairs and spokesperson for the GovernmentWEB,weblink Décret du 16 mai 2012 relatif à la composition du Gouvernement, Journal officiel de la République française, 7 May 2012, in the Government of Jean-Marc Ayrault; grew up in AmiensJacques Bertoin, « Najat Belkacem, la vie en rose » {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927194518weblink |date=27 September 2007 }}, Jeune-afrique.com, 18 March 2007. and is a graduate of the University of Picardie
- Disiz (1978â), rapper, writer and actor
- Raphaël Poulain (1980â), actor and Rugby Union player
- Julien Benedetto (1981â), television reporter on France 2
- François-Henri Désérable (1987â), writer and ice hockey player
- Olympe (1989â), singer
- Théo Gosselin (1990â), photographer
Sportspeople
{hide}columns-list|colwidth=30em|- Pierre Baruzy, (1897â1994), boxer and Savate coach; between 1922 and 1935, he was crowned 11 times as middleweight champion of France
- Urbain Wallet, (1899â1973), footballer
- Robert Marchand, (1911â), world record holder of the fastest centenarian cycling 100 km
- Alfred Letourneur, (1907â1975), cyclist, world speed record holder on flat ground and behind shelter
- Georges Vallerey, (1927â1954), swimmer, Olympic medalist
- Pal Benko (1928â2019), chess grandmaster
- Gisèle Vallerey, (1930â2010), swimmer
- Bernard Quennehen, (1930â), cyclist
- Michel Macquet, (1932â2002), javelin thrower
- Jean-Luc Van Den Heede, (1945â), sailor, sailing single-handed world record holder
- Pierre Mankowski, (1951â), football player and manager
- Daniel Senet, (1953â), weightlifter, Olympic medalist
- Chantal Langlacé, (1955â), long-distance runner, former holder of the world record for the marathon
- Antoine Richer, (1961â), ice hockey player
- {{Interlanguage link|François Farout|fr{edih}, (1963â), table tennis player, triple {{Interlanguage link|French Table Tennis Championships|fr|3=Championnat de France de tennis de table|lt=champion of France}} and European champion by team in 1984
- Christophe Léotard (1966â), chess grandmaster
- Ãtienne Thobois, (1967â), badminton player
- Gérald Baticle, (1969â), football player and manager
- Nicolas Chatelain, (1970â), table tennis player
- Philippe Gaumont, (1973â2013), cyclist
- Marie Collonvillé, (1973â), heptathlete
- Ãric Chaulvet, (1974â), basketball player
- Franck Perque, (1974â), cyclist, double world track cycling champion
- Amélie Cocheteux, (1978â), tennis player
- Mathieu Mille, (1981â), ice hockey player
- Julie Coin, (1982â), tennis player
- Cédric Ouattara, (1983â), footballer
- Yannick Salem, (1983â), footballer
- Kévin Hecquefeuille, (1984â), ice hockey player
- Lucie Louette Kanning, (1985â), judoka
- Thomas Roussel, (1985â), ice hockey player
- Brian Henderson, (1986â), ice hockey player
- Caroline Loir, (1988â), canoeist
- {{Interlanguage link|Pierre Soudry|fr}}, (1988â), handballer
- Jérémy Stravius, (1988â), swimmer, Olympic champion
- Greg Houla, (1988â), footballer
- Yohan M'Vila, (1988â), footballer
- Dorian N'Goma, (1988â), footballer
- Grégory Beron, (1989â), ice hockey player
- Princesse Goubo, (1991â), basketball player
- Yann M'Vila, (1990â), footballer
- Rudy Gobert, (1992â), basketball player
- Clément Chevrier, (1992â), cyclist
- Mélanie Henique, (1992), butterfly swimmer
- Corentin Ermenault, (1996â), cyclist
Linked to the city
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|- Saint Martin (died 397), Roman soldier, shared his coat with a beggar in Amiens in a gesture which has been remembered
- Saint Honoré (died ca.600), Bishop of Amiens and Patron Saint of bakers
- Lafleur, hero and main character of puppet Amiens "Chés cabotans".
- Jean-Marie Roland de La Platière (1734â1793), Economist and statesman, lived in Amiens and was Inspector of factories in the city.EB1911, Roland, Jean Marie, 23, 462–464, 1,
- Antoine Parmentier, (1737â1813), military pharmacist, agronomist, nutritionist and hygienist. Member of the Academy of sciences of Amiens,WEB,weblink La ville est tout à fait fondée à parler de Parmentier, 10 February 2013, Le Courrier picard, 24 April 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131111235046weblink">weblink 11 November 2013, he popularized the consumption of potatoes
- Jacques Delille or Abbé Delille, (1738â1813), poet and translator, a member of the French Academy, was a professor at the college of Amiens
- Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744â1829), naturalist who laid the foundations of the theory of the evolution of species.EB1911, Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de, 16, 101–102, 1,
- Jean-Baptiste Cousin de Grainville, (1746â1805), philosopher, poet, priest in Amiens and pioneer of fantasy literature
- Madame Roland (1754â1793), figure of the French Revolution, face of the Girondist party, lived in Amiens
- Marguerite Georges, (1787â1867), famous actress, lived at Amiens and began her career there
- {{Interlanguage link|Camille Léon de Chassepot de Beaumont|fr}}, (1808â1893), colonel in the National Guard who, under his command, distinguished himself on 17 November 1870Battle of Amiens (1870)
- Jules Lefebvre, (1836â1911), painter, student of the Ãcole nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts of AmiensWEB,weblink LADY GODIVA Amiens Musée de Picardie, 20 June 2012, culturecommunication.gouv.fr, 21 May 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150904084632weblink">weblink 4 September 2015,
- Jón Sveinsson, (1857â1944), Icelandic priest and author of popular children's books, studied and did his novitiate in Amiens
- Auguste Perret, (1874â1954), architect, creator of the Tour Perret
- Jean Moulin (1899â1943), prefect and resistant, was Secretary general of the prefecture of Somme
- Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque (1902â1947), Marshal of France, began his studies at the college of the ProvidenceJosé Brice, Patton-Leclerc, éd. Société des Ecrivains, 2014, {{ISBN|978-2-342-02324-4}}, 190 p., p. 21; Christine Levisse-Touzé et Musée Jean Moulin, Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque, 1902â1947: la légende d'un héros, éd. Paris-Musées, 2002, {{ISBN|978-2-84734-033-4}}, 159 p., p. 19; Michel Marmin, Leclerc, Ãditions Chronique, 2013, {{ISBN|979-10-90871-96-0}}, 136 p., Philippe fait ses études chez les Jésuites
- Alfred Manessier, (1911â1993), painter, pupil of the Ãcole des beaux-arts of Amiens
- Robert Mallet, (1915â2002), civil servant, writer and man of French radio, founder and Rector of the {{Interlanguage link|Académie d'Amiens (education)|fr|3=Académie d'Amiens (éducation)|lt=Academy of Amiens}}
- Jacques Le Goff, (1924â2014), medievalist historian, he taught at the {{Interlanguage link|Lycée Louis-Thuillier|fr}}
- Alain Bombard, (1924â2005), medical biologist and navigator, lived in Amiens for twenty years
- André Crépin (1928â2013), essayist, linguist and medievalist, Member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, lived in Amiens
- {{Interlanguage link|Gilbert Richard|fr}}, (1928â), television producer and host on the first television channel (1960â1992)
- Vladimir Volkoff, (1932â2005), writer, lived in Amiens
- Stéphane Le Foll, (1960â), politician, Minister of agriculture in Jean-Marc Ayrault I and II, Manuel Valls I and II Governments, graduated from the agricultural college of Amiens Le Paraclet
- Grégoire Delacourt, (1960â), writer, had part of his studies at the school of Providence in Amiens
- Catherine Fleury-Vachon, (1966â), judoka, Olympic champion; head of the "pôle Espoirs" of Amiens un 1998â2005
- Frédéric Cuvillier, (1968â), politician, Deputy Minister of transport and maritime economy in Jean-Marc Ayrault I and II, Manuel Valls I Governments, graduated in law at the University of Picardy
- Laurent Delahousse (1969â), journalist and television presenter, grew up in Amiens
- Pascale Boistard, (1971â), politician, Secretary of State for the rights of women in the Second Valls Government, Member of Parliament for Somme's 1st constituency (Northern Amiens)
- Benjamin Biolay, (1973â), singer-songwriter, lived in AmiensWEB,weblinkweblink" title="archive.today/20130628202336weblink">weblink dead, 28 June 2013, Vite dit, April 2013, Amiens Forum n°40, 29 April 2013,
- Miss Kittin, (1973â), DJ, studied in Amiens
- Ãlodie Gossuin-Lacherie, (1980â), television presenter, radio host, Miss France and Miss Europe 2001, registered at the Picardy regional Council since 2004.WEB,weblink LACHERIE-GOSSUIN Elodie, 2010, Conseil Régional de Picardie, 22 October 2014, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20141022171955weblink">weblink 22 October 2014,
- Nicolas Duvauchelle, (1980â), actor and model, has lived in Amiens
- Ãdouard Louis, (1992â), writer and academic, studied at the Lycée Madeleine Michelis and the University of Picardy
Heraldry, logo and motto
{{Blazon-arms| img1=Blason fr ville Amiens.svg| legend1=Arms of Amiens- Logo of the city of Amiens
- A stamp representing the arms of the city was issued in 1962, this issue fitted into one of the Arms of cities. Its power of postage was five cents. It was issued on 23 January 1962 and withdrawn from sale on 23 January 1977. A first day was arranged in Amiens on 21 July 1962. It was designed by {{interlanguage link|Robert Louis (architect)|fr|3=Robert Louis|lt=Robert Louis}}. Artist Arman made a board collage of this stamp.Åuvre listed under the No. APA 8005.62.010 Arman archives in New York.
See also{| class"toccolours" border"0" cellpadding"2" cellspacing"10" style"margin:auto; margin:0.5em;"
- {{interlanguage link|Académie des sciences, des lettres et des arts d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Centre international Jules Verne|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Cirque Jules-Verne|fr}}
- Amiens International Film Festival
- Lafleur et les Théâtres Amiénois de Cabotins
- {{interlanguage link|La Lune des Pirates|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Maison de Jules Verne|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Maison de la culture d'Amiens|fr}}
- Musée de l'Hôtel de Berny
- Musée de Picardie
- {{interlanguage link|Rendez-vous de la bande dessinée d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Zénith d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Chambre de commerce et d'industrie d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Devred 1902|fr}}
- Gueudet
- {{interlanguage link|Velours d'Utrecht|fr}}
- Yvert et Tellier
- {{interlanguage link|Académie d'Amiens (éducation)|fr|3=Académie d'Amiens (éducation)|lt=Académie d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Conservatoire à rayonnement régional d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure d'art et de design d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãcole supérieure de commerce d'Amiens|fr}}
- ESIEE Amiens
- University of Picardie (or University of Picardie Jules-Verne, UPJV)
- Acheulean
- Ambiani
- {{interlanguage link|Anciens maïeurs d'Amiens|fr}}
- Battle of Amiens (1870)
- {{interlanguage link|Battle of Amiens (1358)|fr|3=Bataille d'Amiens (1358)}}
- Battle of Amiens (1918)
- {{interlanguage link|Battle of Amiens (1940)|fr|3=Bataille d'Amiens (1940)}}
- Charter of Amiens
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Amiens
- Mise of Amiens
- History of Amiens
- {{interlanguage link|List of counts of Amiens|fr|3=Liste des comtes d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|List of bishops of Amiens|fr|3=Liste des évêques d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|List of vidames of Amiens|fr|3=Liste des vidames d'Amiens}}
- Operation Jericho
- Treaty of Amiens (1802)
- {{interlanguage link|Samarobriva|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Sayetterie|fr}}
- Siege of Amiens (1597)
- Treaty of Amiens (1279)
- Treaty of Amiens (1423)
- {{interlanguage link|Bois Bonvallet|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Cimetière de La Madeleine (Amiens)|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Cimetière Saint-Acheul|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Clos Alexandre (Amiens)|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Hortillonnages d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Archaeological garden of Saint-Acheul|fr|3=Jardin archéologique de Saint-Acheul}}
- {{interlanguage link|Jardin des plantes d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|List of memorials and military cemeteries of Somme|fr|3=Liste des mémoriaux et cimetières militaires de la Somme}}
- {{interlanguage link|Parc de l'Evéché d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Parc de la Hotoie|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Château de Montières|fr|3=Château de Montières|lt=Parc du château de Montières}}
- {{interlanguage link|Parc du Grand Marais d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Parc Jean-Rostand|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Parc Saint-Pierre (Amiens)|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Square Saint-Denis d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Zoo d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Beffroi d'Amiens|fr}}
- Amiens Cathedral
- {{interlanguage link|Château de Montières|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Citadelle d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Germain-l'Ãcossais d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Leu d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Saint-Rémi d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Ãglise Sainte-Anne d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Hôtel particulier Bouctôt Vagniez|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|List of historic monuments in Amiens|fr|3=Liste des monuments historiques d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Moulin Passe-Avant|fr}}
- Tour Perret
- {{interlanguage link|Urban area of Amiens|fr|3=Aire urbaine d'Amiens}}
- Arrondissement of Amiens
- Communauté d'agglomération Amiens Métropole
- Communes of the Somme department
- {{interlanguage link|List of former communes of Somme|fr|3=Liste des anciennes communes de la Somme}}
- Somme
- Picardy
- Amiens SC
- AC Amiens
- {{interlanguage link|Amiens Métropole Natation|fr}}
- Coliséum
- Hockey Club Amiens Somme
- Amiens Spartiates
- Stade de la Licorne
- Amiens â Glisy Aerodrome
- {{interlanguage link|Public Transport in Amiens|fr|3=Transports en commun d'Amiens|lt=Ametis}} (bus network)
- Gare d'Amiens
- Gare Saint-Roch
- LGV Paris â London via Amiens
- RoissyâPicardie Link
- {{interlanguage link|Rocade d'Amiens|fr}}
- {{interlanguage link|Tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Tramway d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Former tramway of Amiens|fr|3=Ancien tramway d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Public transport in Amiens|fr|3=Transports en commun d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Trolleybus of Amiens|fr|3=Trolleybus d'Amiens}}
- {{interlanguage link|Vélam|fr}} (bike sharing system)
Notes
{{reflist|2|group=note}}References
{{reflist|refs =MAGAZINE, J'ai rendu visite à la mamie d'Amiens de Nicolas Duvauchelle
, Romain Blondeau
, 26 March 2011
, Les Inrockuptibles
, 29 April 2013
,weblink
, }}, Romain Blondeau
, 26 March 2011
, Les Inrockuptibles
, 29 April 2013
,weblink
Further reading
(File:Nuvola apps ksig horizonta.png|frameless|30px) : Document used to draft this article.{{Div col|colwidth=35em}}- BOOK, fr, Jean, Estienne, François, Vasselle, Le Bel Amiens, The beautiful Amiens, 1967, Martelle éditions, Amiens, 203, Picardie, 2-87890-014-6,
- BOOK, fr, Paule, Roy, Maurice, Duvanel, Amiens : De Daguerre à Jules Verne, 1849-1905, Amiens: De Daguerre to Jules Verne, 1849-1905, 1988, Ãditions Poiré-Choquet, Amiens, 155, 978-2-9502147-2-0,
- BOOK, fr, Marc, Breitman, Rob, Krier, Le Nouvel Amiens, The new Amiens, 1989, Mardaga/Institut Français d'Architecture, Bruxelles, 471, Villes, 2-87009-368-3,
- BOOK, fr, Alain Trogneux, Amiens entre deux guerres : Fêtes, spectacles et distractions, Amiens between two wars: parties, performances and entertainments, 1991, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 208, Hier, 2-906389-29-3, Alain Trogneux,
- BOOK, fr, Bruno, Barbier, La grande guerre à Amiens, The great war in Amiens, 1992, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 192, Hier, 2-906389-39-0,
- BOOK, fr, Hervé, Cultru, Amiens "Belle Epoque". Vie culturelle et artistique, Amiens "Belle Ãpoque". Cultural and artistic life, 1994, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 160, Hier, 2-906389-56-0,
- BOOK, fr, Pierre, Mabire, Claude, Ropars, Jacques, Héritier, Amiens Mémoire, Amiens memory, 1995, Edi Loire, 128, 978-2-84084-030-5,
- BOOK, fr, Olivier, Bondois, Les banques à Amiens à l'époque de Jules Verne, Amiens banks at the time of Jules Verne, 1996, Centre International Jules Verne, 90â103, Revue Jules Verne,
- BOOK, fr, Alain, Trogneux, Amiens, années 50 : De la Libération à la Ve République, Amiens, 50s: from Liberation until the Fifth Republic, 1997, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 224, Hier, 2-906389-83-8,
- BOOK, fr, Michel, Curie, Didier, Cry, Amiens au fil du regard, Amiens over look, 1999, Martelle éditions, Amiens, 111, 978-2-87890-074-3,
- BOOK, fr, Alain, Trogneux, Amiens, années 60 : Naissance d'une capitale régionale, Amiens, 1960s: birth of a regional capital, 2000, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 224, Hier, 2-911576-25-X,
- BOOK, fr, Daniel, Delattre, Emmanuel, Delattre, Amiens, ses rues, ses faubourgs, Amiens, its streets, its suburbs, 2005, Ãditions Delattre, 192, 978-2-915907-15-5,
- BOOK, fr, Olivier, Carpi, Une République imaginaire : Amiens pendant les troubles de religion (1559-1597), An imaginary Republic: Amiens during the troubles of religion (1559-1597), 2005, Belin, 254, Histoire et société, 2-7011-3239-8,
- BOOK, fr, Véronique, Groseil, Amiens Jardins, Amiens Gardens, 2005, Ãditions Librairie du Labyrinthe, Amiens, 144, 2-9523061-2-5,
- BOOK, fr, Scarlett, Beauvalet, Gérard, Hurpin, Amiens à l'époque moderne (1500-1850) : Aspects d'une société urbaine en Picardie, Amiens at the modern era (1500-1850): Aspects of an urban society in Picardy, 2005, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 336, Hier, 2-911576-60-8,
- BOOK, fr, François, Ruffin, Quartier Nord, North quarter, 2006, Fayard, 517, 2-213-62901-3,
- BOOK, fr, Pascal, Lando, Emmanuelle, Poiret, Amiens et le pays de Somme, Amiens and the Lands of Somme, 2007, Ãditions Déclics, Paris, 80, Tranches de France, 978-2-84768-098-0,
- BOOK, fr, Xavier, Bailly, Karine, Gauthier, Amiens, ville d'art et d'histoire, Amiens, city of art and history, 2007, Ãditions du patrimoine, Centre des monuments nationaux, 144, 978-2-85822-933-8, (File:Nuvola apps ksig horizonta.png|frameless|30px)
- BOOK, fr, Isabelle, Barbedor, Thierry, Lefébure, Ãglises et chapelles des siecles XIXe et XXe (Amiens métropole), Churches and chapels of the 19th and 20th centuries (Amiens metropole), 2008, Ãditions lieux-Dits, Lyon, 72, Parcours du Patrimoine, 978-2-914528-47-4,
- BOOK, fr, Maurice, Duvanel, Pierre, Mabire, Les Amiénois : De la terre et de l'eau, Amiens: of the earth and water, 2008, Ãditions du Moulin-Alidor, CrèvecÅur-le-Grand, 143, 978-2-917190-03-6,
- BOOK, fr, Maurice, Duvanel, Pierre, Mabire, Les Amiénois : A pied, à cheval, en avion, The Amiens: On foot, on horseback, by plane, 2008, Ãditions du Moulin-Alidor, CrèvecÅur-le-Grand, 143, 978-2-917190-05-0,
- BOOK, fr, Maurice, Duvanel, Pierre, Mabire, Les Amiénois : Des rires, du sang, des larmes, Amiens: Laughs, blood, tears, 2009, Ãditions du Moulin-Alidor, CrèvecÅur-le-Grand, 144, 978-2-917190-06-7,
- BOOK, fr, Maurice, Duvanel, Pierre, Mabire, Les Amiénois : De l'ombre à la lumière, Amiens: Shadow in the light, 2009, Ãditions du Moulin-Alidor, CrèvecÅur-le-Grand, 143, 978-2-917190-08-1,
- BOOK, fr, Jean-Marie, Fouré, Amiens : du Tram au Bus, Amiens: Of the tram to Bus, 2009, Ãditions du Moulin-Alidor, CrèvecÅur-le-Grand, 96, 978-2-917190-07-4,
- BOOK, fr, Kaltoume, Dourouri, Amiens d'Antan : Amiens à travers la carte postale ancienne, Yesteryear Amiens: Amiens through old postcards, 2009, HC Ãditions, 110, La France d'antan, 978-2-35720-007-4, (File:Nuvola apps ksig horizonta.png|frameless|30px)
- BOOK, fr, Claude, Tillier, Franck, Delautre, Amiens à l'heure bleue, Amiens to the blue hour, 2011, Engelaere Ãditions, 72, 978-2-917621-11-0,
- BOOK, fr, Nathalie, Delattre-Arnould, Daniel, Delattre, Les rues d'Amiens, promenade dans le temps, Tome 1, les rues de A Ã D, 2012, Ãditions Delattre, The streets of Amiens, walk in time, volume 1, the streets of A to D, 96, 978-2-364640-16-0,
- BOOK, fr, Philippe, Leleux, Hortillonnages et hortillons, Vegetable farming and farms, 2012, Ãditions Librairie du Labyrinthe, Amiens, 80, 978-2-918397-07-6,
- BOOK, fr, Pierre, Bou, 12 juillet 1913 : Le Grand Prix de l'Automobile Club de France, 12 July 1913: The Grand Prix of the Automobile Club of France, 2012, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 96, Amiens un jour, 978-2-36058-034-7,
- BOOK, fr, Delphine, Roger, Histoire d'une ville: Amiens, History of a city: Amiens, 2013, Centre régional de documentation pédagogique d'Amiens, 161, série parcours d'Histoire, 978-2-86615-391-5, (File:Nuvola apps ksig horizonta.png|frameless|30px)
- BOOK, fr, Nicolas, Tixier, Amiens 2030 : Le quotidien en projets, Amiens 2030: The daily projects, 2013, Bazar Urbain éditions, 490, 978-2-9545249-0-0,
- BOOK, fr, Manuel, Sanchez, Solène, Bouton, Kaltoume, Dourouri, Amiens : Grand Amiénois - Circuit du souvenir 1914-1918, Amiens: Grand Amiénois - Circuit of remembrance 1914-1918, 2013, Gallimard Loisirs, Paris, 52, Cartoville, 978-2-7424-3527-2,
- BOOK, fr, Alain, Trogneux, Amiens, années 70 : La fin des Trente Glorieuses, Amiens, 1970s: The end of the "Glorious Thirty", 2014, Encrage Ãditions, Amiens, 224, Hier, 978-2-36058-040-8,
External links
{{Commons and category|Amiens}}{{Wikivoyage}}- Official website
- Directory of City Councils{{Dead link|date=February 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} {{in lang|fr}}
- {{Structurae|id=20000274|title=Amiens Cathedral}}
- The Cathedral of Amiens colored !
- weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20040401185039weblink">Columbia University Media Center for Art History â Amiens Cathedral Website
- weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20060520191910weblink">Amiens â Business Directory
- weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20070927145951weblink">Pictures of Amiens and the Somme
- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Amiens" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 7:34am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
- "Amiens" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 7:34am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
[ this remote article is provided by Wikipedia ]
LATEST EDITS [ see all ]
GETWIKI 23 MAY 2022
The Illusion of Choice
Culture
Culture
GETWIKI 09 JUL 2019
Eastern Philosophy
History of Philosophy
History of Philosophy
GETWIKI 09 MAY 2016
GetMeta:About
GetWiki
GetWiki
GETWIKI 18 OCT 2015
M.R.M. Parrott
Biographies
Biographies
GETWIKI 20 AUG 2014
GetMeta:News
GetWiki
GetWiki
© 2024 M.R.M. PARROTT | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED