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   France Hotels Chambres and Chalets

Les Libellules in Scrignac, France

Accommodation Type: Private Home
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): No
Address:
11 Route de Leinguern
Scrignac
11 Route de Leinguern
Scrignac
Scrignac, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
+331--0033298782128
Lowest Price / Day  
$50 USD
or
50 France, Euro (EUR)

France Bed And Breakfast in Mayenne, France

Accommodation Type: Private Home
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
9 rue du maine
Saint Denis de Gastines
53500
Mayenne, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0033-(0)243-112 166
Lowest Price / Day  
$58 USD
or
45 France, Euro (EUR)

Guesthouse La Matabone In Provence in Lorgues, France


Only 15 mns away from La Garde Freinet, 40mns from St Tropez, La Matabone offers quality accommodation. 5 rooms with hills views,....... (more)
Accommodation Type: Other
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
1614 ROUTE DE VIDAUABAN
83510
Lorgues, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
33-9-64003648
Lowest Price / Day  
$85 USD
or
70 France, Euro (EUR)

Creissanhome in Creissan, France


The house
Accommodation Type: Private Home
Holiday Home, House, Self Catering
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): No
Address:
Rue du Chateau
Creissan, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0044-1736-350493
Lowest Price / Day  
$90 USD
or
50 France, Euro (EUR)

Domaine De La Carrere in Pau, France


Welcome to Domaine de la Carrere at Arthez-de-Bearn, near Pau in the South West of France
Accommodation Type: Hotel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Rue La Carrere,
64370,
Arthez-de-Bearn,
Pau, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0033-(0)524-376 125
Lowest Price / Day  
$120 USD
or
85 France, Euro (EUR)

Millett Guesthouse in Carcassonne, France


A traditional Carcassonne townhouse, situated in the heart of the main town known as Bastide Saint-Louis
Accommodation Type: Private Home
Bed and Breakfast, Guesthouse, Hostel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
28 Rue du 4th Septembre
Carcassonne
France
11000
Carcassonne, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0033--(0)4 68 25 32 27
Lowest Price / Day  
$40 USD
or
29 France, Euro (EUR)

Domaine De Borie Chambres Dhotes Et Gite in Bretenoux, France

Accommodation Type: Private Home
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Domaine de Borie 46130 Bretenoux, France
Bretenoux, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
33-05-65386149
Lowest Price / Day  
$72 USD
or
45 France, Euro (EUR)

La Maison Des Pins in Villegailhenc, France

Accommodation Type: Hotel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
13 Avenue Du Languedoc
Villegailhenc, France
Lowest Price / Day  
$75 USD
or
55 France, Euro (EUR)

Aux Chants De L Oiseau in Gagnac-sur-Cere, France


Front of house
Accommodation Type: Hotel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Le Bourg
Gagnac-sur-cere
Gagnac-sur-Cere, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0033-0565-108247
Lowest Price / Day  
$52 USD
or
33 France, Euro (EUR)

Les Defaix in Les Defaix, France


This is the front view of the main house
Accommodation Type: Other
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Les Defaix
87440 Saint Mathieu
Haute Vienne
France
Les Defaix, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
33-555-008606
Lowest Price / Day  
$55 USD
or
35 France, Euro (EUR)

Ferme De Candeloup in Monein, France


Accommodation Type: Hotel
2 Star, Boutique Hotel, Small Luxury Hotel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Chemin Augas
Quartier Candeloup
Monein 64360
France
Monein, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
33-559-212668
Lowest Price / Day  
$60 USD
or
35 France, Euro (EUR)

Chatenet Holiday Gites in Chatenet, France

Accommodation Type: Other
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): Yes
Address:
Le Bourg 17210 Chatenet France
Chatenet, France
Lowest Price / Day  
$99 USD
or
64 France, Euro (EUR)

Hotel De La Vallee in Lourdes, France

Accommodation Type: Hotel
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): No
Address:
28 rue des pyrenees
65100 Lourdes
Lourdes, France
For Room Reservations and Enquiries, Call:
0033-05-62947171
Lowest Price / Day  
$50 USD
or
50 France, Euro (EUR)

Ferme De Tayac in Les Eyzies, France


Accommodation Type: Other
 
Free Wireless Internet (WiFi Hotspot or Access Point): No
Address:
Ferme de Tayac
Les Eyzies de Tayac
24620 Dordogne
France
Les Eyzies, France
Lowest Price / Day  
$125 USD
or
80 France, Euro (EUR)


   France Neighbouring and Adjoining Countries

   More Information About France:

The National Capital of France is: Paris
France Area in Square Kilometers: 547030.0
Population Statistics of France are: 64094000
France is located in the continent of Europe. The Europe continent code is EU


France

French Republic

Geography
Area: 551,670 sq. km. (220,668 sq. mi.); largest west European country, about four-fifths the size of Texas.
Cities: Capital--Paris. Major cities--Marseille, Lyon, Toulouse, Strasbourg, Nice, Rennes, Lille, Bordeaux.
Terrain: Varied.
Climate: Temperate.

People
Nationality: Adjective--French.
Population (Jan. 1, 2007 est.): 63,392,140 (including overseas territories), 61,538,322 (metropolitan).
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 0.6%.
Ethnic groups: Celtic and Latin with Teutonic, Slavic, North African, Sub-Saharan African, Indochinese, and Basque minorities.
Religion: Roman Catholic 85% (est.), Muslim 10% (est.), Protestant 2%, Jewish 1%.
Language: French.
Education: Years compulsory--10. Literacy--99%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2007)--3.7/1,000.
Work force (2005 est.): 27.637 million: Services--72.8%; industry and commerce--23.0%; agriculture--3.8%; undetermined--0.3%.

Government
Type: Republic.
Constitution: September 28, 1958.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of state); prime minister (head of government). Legislative--bicameral Parliament (577-member National Assembly, 319-member Senate). Judicial--Court of Cassation (civil and criminal law), Council of State (administrative court), Constitutional Council (constitutional law).
Subdivisions: 22 administrative regions containing 96 departments (metropolitan France). Four overseas departments (Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Guiana, and Reunion); five overseas territories (New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna Islands, and French Southern and Antarctic Territories); and two special status territories (Mayotte and St. Pierre and Miquelon).
Political parties: Union for a Popular Majority (UMP--a synthesis of center-right Gaullist/nationalist and free-market parties); Union for French Democracy (a fusion of centrist and pro-European parties); Socialist Party; Communist Party; National Front; Greens; various minor parties.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.

Economy
GDP (2006): $2.250 trillion.
Avg. annual growth rate (2006): 2.0% (2000 price basis); 2.2% (preceding price basis).
Per capita GDP at PPP (2006): $30,342.
Agriculture: Products--grains (wheat, barley, corn); wines and spirits; dairy products; sugar beets; oilseeds; meat and poultry; fruits and vegetables.
Industry: Types--aircraft, electronics, transportation, textiles, clothing, food processing, chemicals, machinery, steel.
Trade (est.): Exports (2006)--$489.9 billion (f.o.b.): automobiles, aircraft and aircraft components, pharmaceuticals, automobile equipment, pharmaceuticals, automobile equipment, iron and steel products, refined petroleum products, cosmetics, organic chemicals, electronic components, wine and champagne. Imports (2006)--$523.6 billion (fob): oil and natural gas, automobiles, aircraft and aircraft components, refined petroleum products, automobile equipment, pharmaceuticals, iron and steel products, and computers/computer-related products. Major trading partners--EU and U.S.
Exchange rate: U.S. $1=euro 0.884 in 2003, 0.804 in 2004, 2005, and 0.7964 in 2006.

PEOPLE
Since prehistoric times, France has been a crossroads of trade, travel, and invasion. Three basic European ethnic stocks--Celtic, Latin, and Teutonic (Frankish)--have blended over the centuries to make up its present population. France's birth rate was among the highest in Europe from 1945 until the late 1960s. Since then, its birth rate has fallen but remains higher than that of most other west European countries. Traditionally, France has had a high level of immigration. More than 1 million Muslims immigrated in the 1960s and early 1970s from North Africa, especially Algeria. About 85% of the population is Roman Catholic, 10% Muslim, less than 2% Protestant, and about 1% Jewish. In 2004, there were over 6 million Muslims, largely of North African descent, living in France. France is home to both the largest Muslim and Jewish populations in Europe.

Education is free, beginning at age 2, and mandatory between ages 6 and 16. The public education system is highly centralized. Private education is primarily Roman Catholic. Higher education in France began with the founding of the University of Paris in 1150. It now consists of 91 public universities and 175 professional schools, including the post-graduate Grandes Ecoles. Private, college-level institutions focusing on business and management with curriculums structured on the American system of credits and semesters have been growing in recent years.

The French language derives from the vernacular Latin spoken by the Romans in Gaul, although it includes many Celtic and Germanic words. Historically, French has been used as the international language of diplomacy and commerce. Today it remains one of six official languages at the United Nations and has been a unifying factor in Africa, Asia, the Pacific, and the Caribbean.

HISTORY
France was one of the earliest countries to progress from feudalism to the nation-state. Its monarchs surrounded themselves with capable ministers, and French armies were among the most innovative, disciplined, and professional of their day. During the reign of Louis XIV (1643-1715), France was the dominant power in Europe. But overly ambitious projects and military campaigns of Louis and his successors led to chronic financial problems in the 18th Century. Deteriorating economic conditions and popular resentment against the complicated system of privileges granted the nobility and clerics were among the principal causes of the French Revolution (1789-94). Although the revolutionaries advocated republican and egalitarian principles of government, France reverted to forms of absolute rule or constitutional monarchy four times--the Empire of Napoleon, the Restoration of Louis XVIII, the reign of Louis-Philippe, and the Second Empire of Napoleon III. After the Franco-Prussian War (1870), the Third Republic was established and lasted until the military defeat of 1940.

World War I (1914-18) brought great losses of troops and materiel. In the 1920s, France established an elaborate system of border defenses (the Maginot Line) and alliances to offset resurgent German strength. France was defeated early in World War II, however, and was occupied in June 1940. In July, the country was divided into two: one section being ruled directly by the Germans, and a second controlled by the French ("Vichy" France) and which the Germans did not occupy. German and Italian forces occupied all of France, including the "Vichy" zone, following the Allied invasion of North Africa in November 1942. The "Vichy" government largely acquiesced to German plans, namely in the plunder of French resources and the forceful deportations of tens of thousands of French Jews living in France to concentration camps across Europe, and was even more completely under German control following the German military occupation of November 1942. Economically, a full one-half of France's public sector revenue was appropriated by Germany. After 4 years of occupation and strife, Allied forces liberated France in 1944.

France emerged from World War II to face a series of new problems. After a short period of provisional government initially led by Gen. Charles de Gaulle, the Fourth Republic was set up by a new constitution and established as a parliamentary form of government controlled by a series of coalitions. French military involvement in both Vietnam and Algeria combined with the mixed nature of the coalitions and a consequent lack of agreement caused successive cabinet crises and changes of government.

Finally, on May 13, 1958, the government structure collapsed as a result of the tremendous opposing pressures generated by four years of war with Algeria. A threatened coup led the Parliament to call on General de Gaulle to head the government and prevent civil war. Marking the beginning of the Fifth Republic, he became prime minister in June 1958 and was elected president in December of that year. Also resulting from the Algerian conflict, were decades of increased immigration from the Maghreb states, which functioned to change the composition of French society.

Seven years later, for the first time in the 20th Century, the people of France went to the polls to elect a president by direct ballot. De Gaulle won re-election with a 55% share of the vote, defeating François Mitterrand. In April 1969, President de Gaulle's government conducted a national referendum on the creation of 21 regions with limited political powers. The government's proposals were defeated, and de Gaulle subsequently resigned. Succeeding him as president of France have been Gaullist Georges Pompidou (1969-74), Independent Republican Valery Giscard d'Estaing (1974-81), Socialist François Mitterrand (1981-95), neo-Gaullist Jacques Chirac (1995-2007), and Nicolas Sarkozy (2007-present).

While France continues to revere its rich history and independence, French leaders are increasingly tying the future of France to the continued development of the European Union. France was integral in establishing the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951 and was among the EU's six founding states. During his tenure, President Mitterrand stressed the importance of European integration and advocated the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty on European economic and political union, which France's electorate narrowly approved in September 1992. The center of domestic attention soon shifted, however, to the economic reform and belt-tightening measures required for France to meet the criteria for Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) laid out by the Maastricht Treaty.

Jacques Chirac was reelected as president in 2002, and National Assembly elections were held the same year. Since the September 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S., France has played a central role in the war on terrorism. French forces participate in Operation Enduring Freedom and in the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for Afghanistan. France did not, however, join the coalition that liberated Iraq in 2003. In October and November 2005, three weeks of violent unrest in the largely immigrant suburbs focused French attention further on their minority communities. Also in 2005 French voters disapproved the EU constitution in a national referendum. More recently in the spring of 2006, students protested widely over restrictive employment legislation.

In May 2007, Nicolas Sarkozy was elected as France's sixth president under the Fifth Republic, signaling French approval of widespread economic and social reforms, as well as closer cooperation with the United States.

France



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France(fr)

Country Code: FR


France Facts
French Republic *République française* : 
 
*Motto: **Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité* “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity†: 
 
*Anthem: *“*La Marseillaise*†: 
 
Location of *Metropolitan France* (dark green) – on the European continent (light green & dark grey) – in the European Union (light green) — [Legend] : 
 
Territory of the *French Republic* in the world (excl. Antarctica where sovereignty is suspended) : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Paris 48°52′N 2°19.59′E / 48.867, 2.3265
Official languages : 
French
Demonym : 
French
Government : 
Unitary semi-presidential republic
Government President : 
Nicolas Sarkozy (UMP)
Government Prime Minister : 
François Fillon (UMP)
Formation : 
 
Formation French State : 
843 (Treaty of Verdun)
Formation Current constitution : 
1958 (5th Republic)
EU accession : 
20904
Area : 
 
Area Total[1] : 
674,843 km² (40th) 260,558 sq mi
Area Metropolitan France : 
 
Population : 
 
Population Total[1] : 
64,473,140[5] (20th)
Population Metropolitan France : 
61,875,822[4] (20th)
Population Density[6] : 
114/km² (89th) 295/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (PPP) Total : 
$2,067 trillion[7] (8th)
*GDP* (PPP) Per capita : 
$33,508[7] (IMF) (18th)
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (nominal) Total : 
$2,593 trillion[7] (6th)
*GDP* (nominal) Per capita : 
$42,033[7] (IMF) (16th)
*Gini* (2002) : 
26.7
*HDI* (2005) : 
â–² 0.952 (high) (10th)
Currency : 
Euro,[8] CFP Franc[9] (EUR, XPF)
Time zone : 
CET[6] (UTC+1)
Time zone Summer (DST) : 
CEST[6] (UTC+2)
Internet TLD : 
.fr[10]
Calling code : 
+331
: 
The overseas regions and collectivities form part of the French telephone numbering plan, but have their own country calling codes: Guadeloupe +590; Martinique +596; French Guiana +594, Réunion and Mayotte +262; Saint Pierre et Miquelon +508. The
French Republic *R?publique fran?aise* : 
 
*Motto: **Libert?, ?galit?, Fraternit?* ?Liberty, Equality, Fraternity? : 
 
*Anthem: *?*La Marseillaise*? : 
 
Location of *Metropolitan France* (dark green) ? on the European continent (light green & dark grey) ? in the European Union (light green) ? [Legend] : 
 
Territory of the *French Republic* in the world (excl. Antarctica where sovereignty is suspended) : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Paris 48?52?N 2?19.59?E? / ?48.867, 2.3265
Official languages : 
French
Demonym : 
French
Government : 
Unitary semi-presidential republic
President : 
Nicolas Sarkozy (UMP)
Prime Minister : 
Fran?ois Fillon (UMP)
Formation : 
 
French State : 
843 (Treaty of Verdun)
Current constitution : 
1958 (5th Republic)
EU accession : 
3/25/1957
Area : 
 
Total[1] : 
674,843 km? (40th) 260,558 sq mi
Metropolitan France : 
 
Population : 
 
Total[1] : 
64,473,140[5] (20th)
Metropolitan France : 
61,875,822[4] (20th)
Density[6] : 
114/km? (89th) 295/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$2,067 trillion[7] (8th)
Per capita : 
$33,508[7] (IMF) (18th)
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$2,593 trillion[7] (6th)
Per capita : 
$42,033[7] (IMF) (16th)
*Gini* (2002) : 
26.7
*HDI* (2005) : 
? 0.952 (high) (10th)
Currency : 
Euro,[8] CFP Franc[9] (EUR, XPF)
Time zone : 
CET[6] (UTC+1)
Summer (DST) : 
CEST[6] (UTC+2)
Internet TLD : 
.fr[10]
Calling code : 
+331
: 
The overseas regions and collectivities form part of the French telephone numbering plan, but have their own country calling codes: Guadeloupe +590; Martinique +596; French Guiana +594, R?union and Mayotte +262; Saint Pierre et Miquelon +508. The

France

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