Bc672bce02caa351d97964f6a1ca46b1

Rouen Travel Guide powered by advice from Real Travelers

 Get Real Deal alerts »
Default_icon

Introduction

by Frommers Travel Guides

    135km (84 miles) NW of Paris, 89km (55 miles) E of Le Havre

    The capital of Normandy and the fifth-largest port in France, Rouen is a hub of commerce. It's a bustling, vibrant place, bursting with activity generated by the industries connected to the port and the students at nearby universities and art schools. Former occupants include the writers Pierre Corneille and Gustave Flaubert, Claude Monet (who endlessly painted Rouen's Cathédrale de Notre-Dame), and Joan of Arc ("Oh, Rouen, art thou then my final resting place?"). Today, it's a city of half a million people.

    Victor Hugo called Rouen "the city of a hundred spires." Half of it was destroyed during World War II, mostly by Allied bombers, and many Rouennais were killed. During the reconstruction of the old quarters, some of the almost-forgotten crafts of the Middle Ages were revived. The city on the Seine is rich in historical associations: William the Conqueror died here in 1087, and Joan of Arc was burned at the stake on place du Vieux-Marché in 1431.

    As in Paris, the Seine splits Rouen into a Rive Gauche (Left Bank) and Rive Droite (Right Bank). The old city is on the right bank.

Rouen Travel Experiences

Traveler Photos of Rouen

Part of the William the Conquerer's Chateau in Caen Bc672bce02caa351d97964f6a1ca46b1 Craters at Pointe du Hoc If you look carefully, you can see the giant cement blocks the Allies used to build a temporary port at Arromanches in order to bring in more soldiers and supplies.
 See all photos in Rouen »