Grenoble
Encyclopedia : G : GR : GRE : Grenoble
Grenoble (Occitan: Grasanòbol) is a city and commune in south-east France, situated at the foot of the Alps, at the confluence of the Drac into the Isère River. Located in the Rhône-Alpes région, Grenoble is the préfecture (capital) of the département of Isère. Population of the city (commune) of Grenoble at the 1999 census was 153,317 inhabitants (157,900 inhabitants as of February 2004 estimates). Population of the whole metropolitan area (in French: aire urbaine) at the 1999 census was 514,559 inhabitants.
Geography
Grenoble is surrounded by mountains: to the north the Chartreuse, to the west the Vercors, and to the east the Belledonne range. As such, it is often visited by the Tour de France and is often called the "capital of the Alps". The city is mainly built on the alluvial plain of the river Isere, at an altitude of around 214 meters. Mountain sports give to the city an important touristic interest: twenty ski stations surround the city (the nearest being Le Sappey-en-Chartreuse), some 15 minutes drive away.History
- For the ecclesiastical history, see Bishopric of Grenoble.
- Cularo when the Allobroges built strong walls around the small town in the 3rd Century.
Main sights
Education & research in the city
Secondary level
The presence of a large international community through both foreign students and foreign researchers has prompted the creation of an international school more than a decade ago: the CSI Europole formally situated downtown in the Lycée International Stendhal across from the Maison du Tourisme. Since 2003 the CSI has moved to the Lycée Europole, near the train station. Originally only four language sections were available: German, Spanish, Italian and English but it also has a Portuguese and an Arabic section. It is now one of France's best secondary education centers.University level
Beginning level
By three Bulls of 12 May, 27 May, and 30 September, 1339 the University of Grenoble was founded by Pope Benedict XII.On 25 July, 1339, the Dauphin Humbert II (the counts of Dauphiné bore the title of Dauphin) drew up a charter of the privileges granted to the students at Grenoble, promulgated measures to attract them, and stipulated that the university should give instruction in civil and canon law, medicine, and the arts., whose charter of privileges stipulated that the university should give instruction in civil and canon law, medicine, and the arts.
A curious ordinance issued 10 May, 1340 by Humbert II commanded the destruction of all the forges in the vicinity of Grenoble lest they should produce an irreparable famine of wood and charcoal. Humbert may have wished that life should be frugal where university was established. Finally on 1 August, 1340, he declared that the superior court of justice of Dauphiné (conseil delphinal), which he removed from Saint-Marcellin to Grenoble, should be composed of seven counsellors, four whom might be chosen from among the professors at Grenoble. Humbert's projects do not appear to have been completely realized. The university lacked resources, indeed arts and medicine were not taught, and even the chairs of law seem scarcely to have survived the reign of Humbert II. At all events, when Louis XI created the University of Valence in 1452, he declared that no institution of the kind existed at that time in Dauphiné.
This first attempt at a university had foundered, but it was re-established on sound footing in 1542 by Francois de Bourbon, Count of Saint-Pol, great-uncle of Henry IV of France, and the royal governor of the Dauphiné province. The Italian jurist Gribaldi, the Portuguese jurist Govea, and the French jurist Pierre Lorioz, called Petrus Orioli (Pierre de Loriol)of a family originally of Pernes Les Fontaines, attracted many students thither, but the orthodoxy of these professors was suspected. This was one of the reasons which, in April, 1565, led Charles IX of France to unite the University of Grenoble to that of Valence, for which in 1567 Bishop Montluc, well known as a diplomat and powerful at court, was able to obtain the noted jurist Cujas. The citizens of Grenoble protested and sent delegates to Paris, but the edict of union between the universities was strengthened by the circumstance that at the very time when Charles IX published his edict, Govea and Loriol were compelled to institute a suite against the town of Grenoble in order to secure the payment of their arrears of salary.
Equally ineffectual were the efforts for the renewal of the university frequently made by the town in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Napoleon I, on 1 November, 1805, re-established the faculty of law of Grenoble. Since 1896 the different faculties of Grenoble form the University of Grenoble.
Science & engineering
Grenoble is now a major scientific center, especially in the fields of physics, computer science and applied mathematics: Joseph Fourier University (UJF) is one of the leading French scientific universities while Grenoble Institute of Technology (INPG) trains each year more than 1,000 engineers in high-tech areas. In fact, many fundamental and applied scientific research laboratories are conjointly managed by Joseph Fourier University, Grenoble Institute of Technology and the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS). Numerous other scientific laboratories are managed solely or in collaboration by CNRS and the French National Institute for Research in Computer Science and Control (INRIA).In or near the city also include the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), the Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL) and one of the French Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique (CEA) main research facility.
The recent development of Minatec, a centre for innovation in micro & nanotechnology only increases the position of Grenoble as one of the European scientific centers.
Human & social sciences
An IEP is located here, the Institut d'études politiques de Grenoble, as well as an increasingly reputated business school Grenoble École de management (Grenoble-EM).Miscellaneous
- Grenoble is famous for its walnuts, for which it enjoys an appelation of controlled origin.
- Grenoble hosted the 1968 Winter Olympics and is preparing to bid for the 2018 Winter Olympics.
- Grenoble is also famous for many nearby ski resorts nestled in the surrounding mountains, and its Italian quarter, the "Quartier Saint Laurent".
- It is the home of rugby union team FC Grenoble, soccer team Grenoble Foot 38 and ice hockey team Brûleurs de loups.
Births
Grenoble was the birthplace of:- Abel Servien (1593–1659), diplomat
- Hugues de Lionne (1611–1671), statesman
- Claudine Alexandrine Guérin de Tencin (1681–1749), courtesan and author
- Jacques de Vaucanson (1709–1782), inventor of the modern-day robot
- Étienne Bonnot de Condillac (1715–1780), writer of the Enlightenment
- Jean Joseph Mounier (1758–1806), politician
- Antoine Barnave (1761–1793), orator of the French Revolution
- Casimir Pierre Perier (1777–1832), statesman
- Stendhal (1783–1842), novelist
- Henri Fantin-Latour (1836–1904), painter
- Lionel Terray (born 1921), climber
- Johnny Servoz-Gavin (born 1942), motor racing driver
- André the Giant (1946–1993), professional wrestler and actor
- Michel Lotito (born 1950), entertainer
- Maurice Dantec (born 1959), science fiction author
- Miss Kittin, (real name Caroline Hervé, born 1973), electronica vocalist
- Mélissa Theuriau (born 1978), news presenter
- Julien Brellier, born 1981, footballer
- Calogero, born 1971, musician
- Cristobal Huet, hockey player
- Seyhan Kurt (born 1979) poet and writer
Famous citizens
- Joseph Fourier (1768-1830), French mathematician and physicist
- Jean-François Champollion (1790-1832), French egyptologist
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau, French philosopher and writer, born in Geneva
- Jean-Luc Godard, cineast
- Seyhan Kurt (French poet and writer 1979-)
Sister cities
- - Catania, Italy, since 1961
- - Innsbruck, Austria, since 1963
- - Essen, Germany, since 1976
- - Halle, Germany, since 1976
- - Chişinău, Moldova, since 1977
- - Oxford, United Kingdom, since 1977
- - Rehovot, Israel, since 1977
- - Phoenix, Arizona, United States, since 1990
- - Pécs, Hungary, since 1992
- - Kaunas, Lithuania, since 1997
- - Sfax, Tunisia, since 1998
- - Constantine, Algeria, since 1999
- - Corato, Italy, since 2002
