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  2. SeaFrance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SeaFrance

    SeaFrance was a ferry company based in France, wholly owned by the French railways, SNCF, which operated ferry services between Calais, France, and Dover, England.. The company employed a total of 1,850 staff, including 1,300 seagoing personnel, and was the largest employer in the town of Calais. [1]

  3. MS Côte des Dunes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_Côte_des_Dunes

    MS Côte des Dunes is a Rodin-class ropax ferry operated by DFDS Seaways and currently in service between Dover and Calais.. She was built in 2001 by Aker Finnyards in Rauma, Finland (Yard No.437) for SeaFrance, as a passenger and roll-on roll-off car and commercial vehicle ferry; the engines are made by Wärtsilä.

  4. MS SeaFrance Cézanne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_SeaFrance_Cézanne

    MS SeaFrance Cézanne was a ferry launched in 1979 as Ariadne. [5] Starting life in the Mediterranean, she had spent the majority of her career serving the Dover-Calais cross channel ferry route with successive operators, Sealink, SNCF & SeaFrance, and was taken out of service in February 2009 and scrapped in 2011–2012

  5. Centres régionaux opérationnels de surveillance et de sauvetage

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centres_régionaux...

    CROSS conducts their activities under the authority of the maritime prefects in mainland France and government representatives for state action at sea in Overseas France. Under the Ministry of Ecological Transition , they are managed by Affaires Maritimes (Maritime Matters Department) administrators and provided with staff from the department ...

  6. French Riviera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Riviera

    Logo. The French Riviera, known in French as the Côte d'Azur (IPA: [kot dazyʁ]; Provençal: Còsta d'Azur, IPA: [ˈkwɔstɔ daˈzyʀ]; lit. ' Azure Coast '), is the Mediterranean coastline of the southeast corner of France.

  7. Mont-Saint-Michel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mont-Saint-Michel

    As sea levels rose, erosion reshaped the coastal landscape, and several outcrops of granite emerged in the bay, having resisted the wear and tear of the ocean better than the surrounding rocks. These included Lillemer , Mont Dol , Tombelaine (the island just to the north), and Mont Tombe, later called Mont-Saint-Michel.