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Saint-Cloud
Saint-Cloud Town Hall
Saint-Cloud Town Hall
Coat of arms of Saint-Cloud
Coat of arms
Location (in red) within Paris inner suburbs
Location (in red) within Paris inner suburbs
Saint-Cloud is located in France
Saint-Cloud
Saint-Cloud
Location in France
Saint-Cloud is located in Île-de-France (region)
Saint-Cloud
Saint-Cloud
Location in Île-de-France (region)
Country France
Region Île-de-France
Department Hauts-de-Seine
Arrondissement Nanterre
Canton Saint-Cloud
Intercommunality Grand Paris
Area
1
7.56 km2 (2.92 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
29,727
 • Density 3,932.1/km2 (10,184/sq mi)
Time zone UTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST) UTC+02:00 (CEST)
INSEE/Postal code
92064 /92210
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Saint-Cloud (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ klu]) is a commune in the western suburbs of Paris, France, 9.6 kilometres (6.0 miles) from the centre of Paris. Like other communes of Hauts-de-Seine such as Marnes-la-Coquette, Neuilly-sur-Seine and Vaucresson, Saint-Cloud is one of France's wealthiest towns, with the second-highest average household income of communities with 10,000 to 50,000 households.

Saint-Cloud is home to the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (IBWM), located in the Parc de Saint-Cloud's Pavillon de Breteuil.

History

Bouchot - Le general Bonaparte au Conseil des Cinq-Cents
Napoleon Bonaparte in the coup d'état of 18 Brumaire in Saint-Cloud, François Bouchot, 1840.

The town is named after Clodoald, grandson of Clovis, who is supposed to have sought refuge in a hamlet on the Seine near Paris, then named Novigentum, like many other newly founded mercantile settlements outside the traditional towns. After he was canonized, the village where his tomb was located took the name of Sanctus Clodoaldus.

A park contains the ruins of the Château de Saint-Cloud, built in 1572 and destroyed by fire in 1870 during the Franco-Prussian War. The château was the residence of several French rulers and served as the main country residence of the cadet Orléans line until the French Revolution. The palace was also the site of the coup d'état led by Napoleon Bonaparte that overthrew the French Directory in 1799.

The town is also famous for the Saint-Cloud porcelain produced there from 1693 to 1766.

The Headquarters of the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) was at 22 Rue Armengaud from 1966 until 1989, when it moved to Lyon.

Demographics

Historical population
Year Pop. ±% p.a.
1793 2,042 —    
1800 1,660 −2.92%
1806 2,360 +6.04%
1821 1,953 −1.25%
1831 1,935 −0.09%
1836 2,316 +3.66%
1841 3,417 +8.09%
1846 3,457 +0.23%
1851 3,828 +2.06%
1856 4,405 +2.85%
1861 5,611 +4.96%
1866 5,248 −1.33%
1872 8,956 +9.32%
1876 4,862 −14.16%
1881 4,126 −3.23%
1886 5,380 +5.45%
1891 5,660 +1.02%
1896 6,374 +2.40%
Year Pop. ±% p.a.
1901 7,195 +2.45%
1906 8,354 +3.03%
1911 9,725 +3.09%
1921 11,921 +2.06%
1926 13,519 +2.55%
1931 16,341 +3.86%
1936 16,597 +0.31%
1946 17,614 +0.60%
1954 20,671 +2.02%
1962 26,472 +3.14%
1968 28,158 +1.03%
1975 28,139 −0.01%
1982 28,561 +0.21%
1990 28,597 +0.02%
1999 28,157 −0.17%
2009 29,726 +0.54%
2014 29,360 −0.25%
2020 29,560 +0.11%
Source: EHESS and INSEE (1968–2020)

Main sights

"Ícaro" em Saint-Cloud - Monumento em homenagem a Santos Dumont - 1-13666-0000-0000, Acervo do Museu Paulista da USP
Santos Dumont posing near the statue in his honour in 1913.

The main landmarks are the park of the demolished Château de Saint-Cloud and the Pavillon de Breteuil. The Saint-Cloud Racecourse, a racetrack for Thoroughbred flat racing, was built by Edmond Blanc in 1901 and hosts a number of important races, including the annual Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud.

Tribute to Santos-Dumont

On the Avenue de Longchamp is a bronze statue commissioned by the Airclub of France representing the Greek mythological figure Icarus, in honour of Alberto Santos-Dumont. Inaugurated on October 19, 1913, it sits on a square near the old Aerostation of Saint-Cloud, where Santos-Dumont performed his experiments with heavier-than-air aircraft. Santos-Dumont was also responsible for the construction of the world's first hangar. A replica has occupied the hangar's site in Saint-Cloud since 1952 after the original was destroyed for its bronze during the Nazi military occupation.

Transport

Saint-Cloud is served by two stations on the Transilien La Défense and Paris-Saint-Lazare suburban rail lines: Le Val d'Or and Saint-Cloud.

The town is also served by tramway Line T2, which runs alongside the Seine.

Central Saint-Cloud, known as le village ("the village"), is also served by the Métro station Boulogne–Pont de Saint-Cloud (Line 10), just across the Seine on the Boulogne-Billancourt side of the Pont de Saint-Cloud.

Saint-Cloud will at the horizon of end 2031equally be connected to the Line 15 of the Paris metro, that is currently under construction.

Hospital

  • René Huguenin Hospital

Education

Saint-Cloud - Rue Pasteur, 18
Internationale Deutsche Schule Paris

Public high schools:

  • Lycée Alexandre-Dumas
  • Lycée Santos-Dumont

It is also served by the public high school Lycée Jean Pierre Vernant in Sèvres.

Private high schools:

  • Institution Saint-Pie-X

International schools:

  • American School of Paris
  • Internationale Deutsche Schule Paris (German school)

A campus of the Paris Nanterre University is also located in the city.

Université Paris-Nanterre campus de Saint-Cloud
Paris Nanterre University Saint-Cloud campus

Personalities

Notable births

Notable residents

  • Henri III of France (1551–1589), King of France, assassinated in Saint-Cloud
  • Philippe d'Orléans (1640–1701) lived in the Château de Saint-Cloud from 1658 to his death in 1701
  • Henrietta of England (1644–1670) lived and died in the Château de Saint-Cloud
  • Napoléon I (1769–1821) lived in the Château de Saint-Cloud
  • Antoine Sénard (1800–1885), member of the National Assembly, mayor of Saint-Cloud from 1871 to 1874
  • Émile Verhaeren (1855–1916), Flemish poet
  • André Chevrillon (1864–1957), French author
  • Florent Schmitt (1870–1958), French composer
  • Maurice Ravel (1875–1937), French composer
  • Marcel Dassault (1892–1986), French businessman and politician
  • Alberto Santos-Dumont (1873–1932), Brazilian inventor and aviation pioneer
  • Lino Ventura (1919–1987), Italian actor, lived and died in Saint-Cloud
  • Jean-Pierre Fourcade (born 1929), French Minister, mayor of Saint-Cloud from 1971 to 1992
  • Christophe Dominici (1972–2020), rugby union player for France and Stade Français
  • Gérard Holtz (born 1946), French sports journalist
  • Jean-Marie Le Pen, French politician, owner of Domaine de Montretout in Saint-Cloud

Notable burials

  • Alimardan Topchubashov (1863–1934)
  • Edmond Blanc (1856–1920)
  • René Alexandre (1885–1946)
  • Maurice Bessy (1910–1993), author of A Pictorial History of Magic and The Supernatural (1963)
  • Gérard Blain (1930–2000)
  • Gilbert Grandval (1904–1981)
  • Fernand Gravey (1905–1970)
  • Jean-René Huguenin (1936–1962)
  • Dorothy Jordan (1761–1816)
  • Vlado Perlemuter (1904–2002)
  • Andrée Servilange (1911–2001)
  • Jean Toulout (1887–1962)
  • Maurice Yvain (1891–1965)

Twin towns – sister cities

Saint-Cloud is twinned with:

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Saint-Cloud para niños

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