On 27 February 1990, the name was changed to Côtes-d'Armor: the French word côtes means "coasts" and ar mor is "the sea" in Breton. The name also recalls that of the Roman province of Armorica ("the coastal region").
Geography
Côtes-d'Armor is part of the current administrative region of Brittany and is bounded by the departments of
Ille-et-Vilaine to the east, Morbihan to the south, and Finistère to the west, and by the English Channel to the north.
The region is an undulating plateau including three well-marked ranges of hills in the south. A granitoid chain, the Monts du Méné, starting in the south-east of the department runs in a north-westerly direction, forming the watershed between the rivers running respectively to the English Channel and the Atlantic Ocean. Towards its western extremity this chain bifurcates to form the Montagnes Noires in the south-west and the Monts d'Arrée in the west of the department. Off the coast, which is steep, rocky and much indented, are the Jentilez, Bréhat and other small islands. The principal bays are those of Saint-Malo and Saint-Brieuc.[4]
Principal towns
The most populous commune is Saint-Brieuc, the prefecture. As of 2019, there are 6 communes with more than 10,000 inhabitants:[3]
The inhabitants of the department are known in French as Costarmoricains.
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1801
504,303
—
1821
552,424
+0.46%
1831
598,872
+0.81%
1841
607,572
+0.14%
1851
632,613
+0.40%
1861
628,676
−0.06%
1876
630,957
+0.02%
1881
627,585
−0.11%
1891
618,652
−0.14%
1901
609,349
−0.15%
1921
557,824
−0.44%
1936
532,000
−0.32%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1946
526,955
−0.10%
1954
503,178
−0.58%
1962
501,923
−0.03%
1968
506,000
+0.13%
1975
525,556
+0.54%
1982
538,860
+0.36%
1990
538,443
−0.01%
1999
542,398
+0.08%
2006
569,498
+0.70%
2011
594,375
+0.86%
2016
598,953
+0.15%
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Côtes-d'Armor's long tradition of anti-clericalism, especially in the interior around Guingamp (a former Communist stronghold), has often led to the department's being seen as an area of left-wing exceptionalism in a region that historically was otherwise strongly Catholic and right-wing. The current president of the departmental council, Christian Coail, is a member of the Socialist Party.
The western part of the department is part of the traditionally Breton-speaking "Lower Brittany" (Breizh-Izel in Breton). The boundary runs from Plouha to Mûr-de-Bretagne. The Breton language has become an intense issue in many parts of Brittany, and many Breton-speakers advocate for bilingual schools. Gallo is also spoken in the east and is offered as a language in the schools and on the baccalaureat exams.