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👉👉👉 CHAPTERS : 👈👈👈
00:00 - Intro
02:01 - #ilovenice et Cadran Solaire - I Love Nice and Sundial viewpoint
06:00 - Viewpoint from the castle hill
06:28 - Quai Rauba Capeu
10:29 - Rauba-Capeù War Memorial
13:46 - In Memoriam Jubilaei 1829 Et Pacis 1871
15:07 - Old Fiat 500 statue - Title: "A Sunday in Nice" - by S. Cipre
15:28 - Statue of Charles Felix of Savoy
16:55 - Quai Lunel
17:38 - Port of Nice Lympia
18:57 - Docks Quay
19:49 - Quai Napoléon 1er
21:37 - Church of Our Lady of the Port of Nice
22:52 - Lou Che - Sculpture - 3 boats sailing on the Mediterranean
23:08 - Quay of the Two Emmanuels
27:02 - Port Lympia viewpoint
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Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, Côte d'Azur, French Riviera and Provence, Europe.
Travel, visit, discover and explore Nice.
Nice is a city and the prefecture of the Alpes-Maritimes department in France, located in the country's southeast corner, on the Italian border and Mediterranean coast.
Part of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, it encompasses the French Riviera alongside neighbouring Var.
Alpes-Maritimes is one of the world's most attractive tourist destinations in recent decades, featuring renowned cities and towns such as Nice, Grasse, Cannes, Antibes, Menton, Èze, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, Villefranche-sur-Mer, Beaulieu-sur-Mer, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, Sainte-Agnès, the Principality of Monaco as well as numerous alpine ski resorts.
The Alpes-Maritimes department is surrounded by the departments of Var in the southwest, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence in the northwest; Italy to the north and east; and the Mediterranean Sea to the south. It surrounds the Principality of Monaco too.
Nice is the second-largest city in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region after Marseille.
The city is nicknamed Nice la Belle, meaning 'Nice the Beautiful'.
The area of today's Nice contains Terra Amata, an archaeological site which displays evidence of a very early use of fire 380,000 years ago. Around 350 BC, Greeks of Marseille founded a permanent settlement and called it Nikaia, after Nike, the goddess of victory.
Because of its historical importance as a winter resort town for the European aristocracy and the resulting mix of cultures found in the city, UNESCO proclaimed Nice a World Heritage Site in 2021.
The first known hominid settlements in the Nice area date back about 400,000 years (homo erectus); the Terra Amata archeological site shows one of the earliest uses of fire, construction of houses, as well as flint findings dated to around 230,000 years ago.
In the 7th century, Nice joined the Genoese League formed by the towns of Liguria.
In 729 the city repulsed the Saracens; but in 859 and again in 880 the Saracens pillaged and burned it, and for most of the 10th century remained masters of the surrounding country.
During the Middle Ages, Nice participated in the wars and history of Italy.
In 1931, following its refurbishment, the city's main seaside promenade, the Promenade des Anglais ("Walkway of the English"), was inaugurated by Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught; it owes its name to visitors to the resort.
These included Queen Victoria along with her son Edward VII who spent winters there, as well as Henry Cavendish, born in Nice, who discovered hydrogen.
Nice's appeal extended to the Russian upper classes. Prince Nicholas Alexandrovich, heir apparent to Imperial Russia, died in Nice and was a patron of the Russian Orthodox Cemetery, Nice where Princess Catherine Dolgorukova, morganatic wife of the Tsar Alexander II of Russia, is buried.
It is the climate that made the Côte d'Azur famous. The current department of Alpes-Maritimes, however, does not have only one climate, the complex terrain and high mountains divide the department between those who are well exposed (the south-facing side) and those which are less (the north-facing side) and even with the mild Mediterranean climate there can be violent storms and prolonged droughts.
One of the attractions of the department is its level of sunshine: over 300 days per year. Despite this the department is also the most stormy of France with an average of 70 to 90 thunderstorm days per year, arising from the differences in temperature due to a warm sea in autumn.
The site of what is now Villefranche and surrounding Beaulieu-sur-Mer and Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat has been settled since prehistoric times. Celto-ligurian tribes roamed the area and established farming communities on the surrounding hills. The Greeks and later the Romans used the natural harbour as a stop-over en route to the Greek settlements around the Western Mediterranean. After the conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar, the Romans built an extension of the Via Aurelia (Aurelian Way).
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