Our favourite hotels in Arras, France
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From 65 EUR
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Moderne means 'stylish' in French. This hotel completely justifies its name - the 55 guestrooms with bathroom and private WC, direct dial phone, satellite TV, radio are perfectly comfortable. There are 2 seminar rooms. The hotel is strategically located close to anything of importance - 5 minues away of Grand Place, just opposite a TGV station and very close to the European Centre for Communicaions and Exchange. |
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From 56 EUR
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The building is a historical site - the facade dates back to 17-th century, and it is listed in a list of monuments of historical interest. If you have a flair for history, you can visit different battlefields from the Second World War. There is free internet access in the hotel. |
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From 46 EUR
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The coziness and home-like feeling you will get in Hotel Balladins glows right from the front door. There are hosts, whose main duty is to make you feel comfortable. There is a restaurant with buffet service. The restaurant offers local cuisine, and its capacity is 60 people. There is a car park not far from the hotel. |
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From 72 EUR
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The greatest room in the hotel is the Grand Salon, lounge suitable for various events, with comfortable seats, bar, big plasma television. There are fax and photocopying services, in case you are on a business meeting. Three are vending machines, the car park is underground, accessible by elevator. |
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Arras hotel reservations
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About Arras
In the northern part of France, close to the border with the Netherlands, lies the small town of Arras (population about 40,000). It is the capital of the Pas-de-Calais region.
First settled by a Gaul tribe, it became a Roman garrison called Atrebatum, but not before the local population had fought valiantly beside Vercingetorix and was among the last to be subdued by Julius Caesar. The province of Artois where it lied was frequently disputed between the French and the Dutch, ended up in French hands in the 17th century, but kept its strong trade links with Flanders. An important document was signed there in January 1579: the Union of Atrecht (Atrecht was the Dutch name of Arras), by which several of the Low Countries pledged allegiance to the Spanish king and Catholicism, while the remaining states formed the Union of Utrecht later the same month, renouncing the Habsburg rule and opting to profess Protestantism.
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