Chelles, Seine-et-Marne
Chelles is a commune in the eastern suburbs of Paris, France. It is located in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region from the center of Paris.
History
Paleolithic artifacts were discovered by chance at Chelles by the pioneering nineteenth-century anthropologist Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet ; he named the corresponding cultural stage of the Paleolithic after the commune: «Chellean» or «Chellian», nowadays known as «Oldowan».At the Merovingian villa of Calae the abbey of Notre-Dame-des-Chelles was founded by Balthild, a seventh-century queen of the Franks. It was largely demolished at the time of the French Revolution.
The Hôtel de Ville was acquired by the commune in 1937.
Geography
There are two main streets in Chelles, Avenue Foch and Avenue de la Résistance.Demographics
The inhabitants are called Chellois.Transport
Chelles is served by Chelles–Gournay station on Paris RER line and on the Transilien Paris-Est suburban rail line.Education
the commune has 13,000 students in 46 public and private schools. The commune includes 19 public preschools and 16 public elementary schools.There are also:
- Four public junior high schools: Collège Beau soleil, Collège Corot, Collège de l'Europe, Collège Pierre Weczerka and Collège Simone Veil - Beau Soleil and de l'Europe have Enseignement Général Professionnel Adapté programmes
- Three public senior high schools/sixth-form colleges, Lycée Gaston Bachelard, Lycée Professionnel Louis Lumière, and Lycée Jehan de Chelles
- One private school - Institution Gasnier Guy, with private preschool and elementary school, junior high school, and senior high school divisions
Culture and recreation
The commune includes the Musée Alfred-Bonno.There is also a public swimming pool, and a public skate park which opened in 1999.
Chelles is twinned with the city of Lindau, Germany.