ARLES is a major town on the tourist circuit, its fame sealed by the extraordinarily well-preserved Roman arena, Les Arènes, at the city's heart, and backed by an impressive variety of other stones and monuments, both Roman and medieval. It was the key city of the region in Roman times, then, with Aix, main base of the counts of Provence before unification with France. For centuries it was Marseille's only rival, profiting from the inland trade route up the Rhône whenever the enemies of France were blocking Marseille's port. Arles declined when the railway put an end to this advantage, and it was an inward-looking depressed town that Van Gogh came to in the late nineteenth century. Today it's a staid and conservative place, but comes to life for the Saturday market, which brings in throngs of farmers from the surrounding countryside, and during the various festivals of tauromachie between Easter and All Saints, when the town's frenzy for bulls rivals that of neighbouring Nîmes. In search for a Arles hotel, look at , this website. Pages in section ‘Arles’: The City, Arrival & information, Hotels, The bullfight, Museums, Restaurants, Roman Arles, Medieval Arles, Van Gogh sights.
Alternate spellings:: Arles, Arle, arle, France, arlle, arlésienne, visiting, visitor, tourist, info, information
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