Angouleme
About Angouleme
Angouleme is a cooperative, the capital of the Charente office, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine district of southwestern France. The occupants of the collective are known as Angoumoisins or Angoumoisines. Situated on a level sitting above a wind of the Charente River, the city is nicknamed the "gallery of the southwest". The city legitimate's populace is somewhat less than 42,000 yet it is the focal point of a urban region of 110,000 individuals expanding in excess of 15 kilometers from east to west.
Angouleme is an Acropolis city situated on a slope sitting above a circle of the Charente constrained in zone upstream by the intersection of the Touvre and downstream by the Anguienne and Eaux Claires. Instead of its old strongholds, Angouleme is surrounded by avenues over the old city dividers, known as the Remparts, from which fine perspectives might be gotten every which way. Inside the town the lanes are regularly restricted. Aside from the church building and the City Hall, the engineering is of little enthusiasm to purists. However, the "old town" has been protected, kept up and to a great extent saved for people on foot. It has a cobbled eatery quarter, with a few displays and boutiques.