Cotentin (The) and Channel Islands, an extraordinary archipelago
par THIN Edmond
Crédits & contributions
- ÉditeurOREP
- Parution08 octobre 2008
Prix TTC
Indisponible
Arrêt définitif de commercialisation. Titre non commandable.
The Mont Saint-Michel, Tombelaine, Chausey, the Minquiers, Jersey, the Ecrehou, Sark, Guernsey, Alderney, Pelee Island, Tatihou, Saint-Marcouf… some of these islands are French, whereas others belong to the British Crown. Why and for how long? Are they all inhabited? What language is spoken there? How are they governed? What do they live on? For how many centuries have they been physically separated from the Cotentin peninsula? The answers to all of these questions and many more are provided by Edmond Thin, renowned for his many works on Normandy’s maritime history, together with an insight into the people, the history and the most spectacular sites to be seen on these charismatic islands which form an extraordinary archipelago around the Cotentin peninsula.
