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    Awaiting Your Return From Shore | Situated at 
    the mouth of the Rance River, Saint Malo is one of the prime tourist 
    destinations in Brittany. In the 17th and 18th centuries this Channel port 
    was already of great importance for merchant ships and government-sanctioned 
    pirates, more politely known as privateers. 
 Saint Malo was the home of the famous explorer Jacques Cartier who sailed 
    from here to explore and colonize Canada. Today visitors flock to Saint Malo 
    to experience the unique "intra-muros" (meaning within the walls) streets of 
    the old citadel. Much of the old town’s appearance is due to faithful 
    reconstruction, necessary after heavy bombings that almost totally destroyed 
    Saint Malo in 1944. Only the ramparts withstood the ravages of war and are 
    original for the most part.
 
 Exploration of the old town should include the Saint Vincent Cathedral, 
    noted for its medieval and modern stained glass windows. Another highlight 
    is the museum in the Château de Saint Malo. Exhibits illustrate the city's 
    most prosperous time during its heydays of piracy, colonialism and slave 
    trading. Various staircases allow access to the ramparts, affording great 
    views over the roof tops and the harbor. Photos mounted along the walls give 
    an idea what the city looked like after the fighting in 1944.
 
 Saint Malo also serves as a gateway for excursions to the legendary Mont 
    Saint Michel, about an hour’s drive away. Crowning the mount's summit is the 
    Abbey of Mont Saint Michel with its ensemble of buildings soaring high above 
    the sea. This is one of the country's most spectacular monuments. As amazing 
    as the abbey itself are the extraordinary tide variations that leave the 
    mount to look out on stretches of bare sand at low tide, while the same 
    expanse of land is totally submerged during high tide.
 
 About 25 miles south of Saint Malo is the medieval town of Dinan. Once 
    totally surrounded by ramparts, 14 towers and a good part of the walls are 
    still standing, encircling beautiful 15th-century timbered houses.
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    Awaiting Your Return 
    From Shore | 
  
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    Complimentary 
    Spirits Await | 
    
    Return to Your 
    Suite and Sail Away to The Next Adventure | 
    
    Entertainment 
    and Dancing Await You |