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Calais
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Calais
Map of Calais

CALAIS is less than 40km from Dover – the Channel's shortest crossing – and is by far the busiest French passenger port, especially now that its rivals Boulogne and Dunkerque have been deprived of ferry business. For a stay in a Calais hotel, have a search on this website. The port (and its accompanying petrochemical works) dominates the town; in fact, there's not much else here. In the last war the British destroyed it to prevent it being used as a base for a German invasion, but the French still refer to it as "the most English town in France", an influence that began after the battle of Crécy in 1346, when Edward III seized it for use as a beachhead in the Hundred Years War. It remained in English hands until 1558, when its loss caused Mary Tudor famously to say: "When I am dead and opened, you shall find Calais lying in my heart." The association has been maintained by various Brits across the centuries: Lady Emma Hamilton, Lord Nelson's mistress; Oscar Wilde on his uppers; Nottingham lacemakers who set up business in the early nineteenth century; and, nowadays, nine million British travellers per year, plus another million-odd day-trippers.


Pages in section ‘Calais’: The Town, Information, Shopping, Restaurants, Around Calais.

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