| Sein Island |
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 Sein Island - Phare
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 Sein Island - Quai des paimpolais
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is an out of time secluded island. It is a unique place, isolated
within its barrier of reefs which was formerly submerged by the ocean. |
Sein Island - Quais des francais libres Man took hold in the Island since prehistory, as protected from the rest of the world by the fierceness of its environment. Located at the entry of the English Channel and a vital maritime passage, Sein was famous for its shipwrecks and its rescuers. The outskirts of the island abound with reefs and wrecks, and the Sein lighthouses guide the ships with their reassuring beams. To the opposite of this imposing nature, the human presence is characterised by its generosity and its |
Sein Island - Monuments des francais libres solidarity. Everyone still remembers the History of the 700 shipwrecked men accommodated in 1796 on an island in prey of starvation, or the embarkation of 150 sailors and fishermen towards England so to answer the call of General de Gaulle. Facing the adversity, the Sein inhabitants tighten the elbows as their white houses are tightened around narrow lanes. Among the curiosities of the Island, you will still run into some women carrying the "jibilinenn", mourning black cap adopted in 1886 during the last cholera epidemic. Take note that the island is free from any land tax, modest compensation of the roughness of the insular life. The proverb says: "Who sees Sein sees its end". Go ahead without fear, you will find the real authenticity. |
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