Dunkirk
[key], Fr. Dunkerque, town, Nord dept., N France, on the
North Sea. It is a leading French port with daily ferry service to Ramsgate
and Dover, England. It is a steel center; oil refining, shipbuilding, food
processing, and the manufacture of electrical equipment are also important.
Among Dunkirk's chief exports are construction materials, steel products,
cement, fruits and vegetables, sugar, fertilizer, and pre-assembled
structures. Probably founded c.7th cent. a.d. and often fortified,
Dunkirk played a key role in the struggles in Europe that extended over
centuries; it was ruled successively by Flanders, Burgundy, Austria, France,
England, and Spain. Ceded briefly in the 1650s to Oliver Cromwell, it was
bought back permanently from Charles II by Louis XIV in 1662. The town
withstood an Anglo-Dutch bombardment in 1694 and an English siege in 1793.
During the 19th cent. improvements were made on the harbor, and Dunkirk grew
in commercial importance. During World War II, more than 300,000 Allied
troops who were cut off from retreat on land by the German breakthrough to
the French Channel ports were evacuated (May 26–June 4, 1940) from
Dunkirk. The retreat was carried out by all kinds of available British
craft, some manned by civilian volunteers, and was protected by the Royal
Air Force. It is considered one of the epic actions of naval history.
See studies by P. Turnball (1978), J. Harris (1988), and H. Sebag-Montefiore (2006).
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
See more Encyclopedia articles on: French Political Geography