Brittany

Showing 9 attractions
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The village of Beuzec-Conq, just outside Concarneau, is home to the Château de Keriolet—a fairy-tale, neo-Gothic extravaganza dating to the 19th century that Walt Disney would have adored — Fodor's
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The fortress-islet of the Ville Close is a particularly photogenic relic of medieval days. Its. — Fodor's
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A panoply of medieval art, St-Pierre boasts a 1537 Renaissance chapel, a Flamboyant Gothic transept portal, and a treasury. — Fodor's
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Running along the coast from Penvern to Trégastel and Ploumanach lies one of Brittany's natural wonders: a delightful and breezy coastline of sepia and coral-coloured beaches. — Lonely Planet
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For a superb view of town, climb to the top of this medieval tower. — Fodor's
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With its distinctive dip in the middle where it was built to conform to the land. It is said to symbolise Christ's inclined head as he was dying on the cross. — Lonely Planet
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Belle Île's fretted western coast has spectacular rock formations and caves including Grotte de l'Apothicairerie, where waves roll in from two sides. — Lonely Planet
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Local furniture, ceramics, and folklore top the bill at the Musée Départemental Breton. — Fodor's
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Carnac also has smaller-scale dolmen ensembles and three tumuli (mounds or barrows), including the 390-foot-long, 38-foot-high Tumulus de St-Michel, topped by a small chapel with views of the rock-strewn countryside. — Fodor's
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