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The view from the Etretat Gardens. The Étretat Gardens (French: Les Jardins D'Étretat) is a cliff-top experimental garden with "living sculptures" [1] in Étretat, Normandy, France. It surrounds a villa that once belonged to Madame Thébault, [clarification needed] an actress from Paris, [2] in the beginning of the 20th century.
Étretat is known for being the last place in France from which the 1927 biplane The White Bird (L'Oiseau Blanc) was seen.French World War I war heroes Charles Nungesser and François Coli were attempting to make the first non-stop flight from Paris to New York City, but after the plane's 8 May 1927 departure, it disappeared somewhere over the Atlantic.
The chalk cliffs at Étretat, a commune in France; Cliffs at Étretat (Massachusetts), a painting by Claude Monet in the Clark Art Institute in Massachusetts; Cliffs at Étretat, a painting by Claude Monet in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow
Stormy Sea in Étretat (1883) by Claude Monet. The Stormy Sea in Étretat is an oil on canvas painting by French Impressionism painter Claude Monet, from 1883.It is held at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon.
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Montaren – Le Jardin du Temple. A collection of fourteen traditional walled gardens with the flowers and vegetables of the region. (see pictures and description) Générargues – the Bamboo Garden of Prafance is a private botanical garden, created in 1856, with one of Europe's oldest and largest collections of bamboos. Nîmes – Jardin de ...
Le Clos Lupin. This Anglo-Norman half-timbered house was built around 1850. In 1918 writer Maurice Leblanc bought a historic villa in Étretat, which he wanted to use for living and working personally.
From Dieppe to Le Havre the coast presents an uninterrupted cliff, about a hundred metres high and straight as a wall. Here and there that great line of white rocks drops sharply and a little, narrow valley, with steep slopes, shaved turf and maritime rushes, comes down from the cultivated plateau towards a beach of shingle where it ends with a ravine like the bed of a torrent.