1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
Roubaix (US:/ruːˈbeɪ/roo-BAY,French:[ʁubɛ]or[ʁube]ⓘ;Dutch:Robaais;West Flemish:Roboais;Picard:Roubés) is a city in northern France, located in theLille metropolitan area on the Belgian border. It is a historically mono-industrialcommune[3] in theNorddepartment,[4] which grew rapidly in the 19th century from its textile industries, with most of the same characteristic features as those of English and Americanboom towns.[5][6] This former new town has faced many challenges linked to deindustrialisation such asurban decay,[7] with their related economic and social implications, since its major industries fell into decline by the middle of the 1970s. Located to the northeast of Lille, adjacent toTourcoing, Roubaix is thechef-lieu of twocantons and the third largest city in the Frenchregion ofHauts-de-France ranked by population with nearly 99,000 inhabitants.[8]
Roubaix occupies a central position on the north-east slope of theMétropole Européenne de Lille: it is set on the eastern side ofLille and the southern side ofTourcoing, close to the Belgian border. As regards towns' boundaries, Roubaix is encompassed by seven cities which constitute its immediate neighbouring environment. Thesemunicipalities are namely: Tourcoing to the north and the northwest,Wattrelos to the northeast,Leers to the east,Lys-lez-Lannoy to the southeast,Hem to the south andCroix to the southwest and the west. Roubaix, alongside those municipalities and twenty-one other communes, belongs to the land of Ferrain, a little district of the formerCastellany of Lille between theLys andScheldt rivers.[14]
As the crow flies, the distance between Roubaix and the following cities is some odd: 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) to Tournai, 18 kilometres (11 mi) to Kortrijk, 84 kilometres (52 mi) toBrussels and 213 kilometres (132 mi) to Paris.[15]
The Trichonstream fed by waters of the Espierre stream used to flow through the rurallandscape of Roubaix before theindustrialisation process began to alter this area in the middle of the 19th century.[19] From that century on, the ensuing industries, with their increasing needs for reliable supplies of goods and water, led to the building of an inlandwaterway connected upstream from theDeûle and downstream to theMarque and Espierre toward the Scheldt, which linked directly Roubaix to Lille.[20][21]
Opened in 1877,[22] theCanal de Roubaix crosses the town from its northern neighbourhoods to its eastern neighbourhoods and partially flows along the city's boundaries. The Canal de Roubaix closed in 1985, after more than a century in use.[23] Thank to the European funded projectBlue Links, the waterway has been reopened toboating traffic since 2011.[24]
The area of the city is not known for undergoing unusual weather events. In regard to the town's geographical location[25] and the results of theMétéo-France'sweather station ofLille-Lesquin,[26][27] Roubaix is a temperateoceanic climate: whilesummer experiences mild temperatures,winter's temperatures may fall to below zero.Precipitation is infrequently intense.
Climate data for Roubaix (1991−2020 normals, extremes 1965−present)
During the Middle Age, the city grew in a northward-facing semicircle around its primitive core, beyond the area spread out between the church Saint Martin and the former fortified castle. The existence of this south boundary remained until the 18th century and marked an urban expansion which mainly occurred on the western and northern sides of the town.[29] Increasing industrialisation, land transport improvement, continued population growth and the resulting need for suitable low cost lands for housing and manufacturing plants, all of which finally led to expand the city southward from the centre, in the 19th century.[30]
The current city's name is most likely derived fromFrankishrausa "reed" andbaki "brook".[31][32][33] Therefore, the meaning ofRoubaix can, in all likelihood, find its origin on the banks of its three historical brooks:Espierre,Trichon andFavreuil.[34] The place was mentioned for the first time in a Latinised form in the 9th century:Villa Rusbaci.[32][33][35] Thereafter, the following names were in use: 1047 and 1106Rubais, 1122Rosbays, 1166Rusbais, 1156 and 1202Robais, 1223Roubais.[32][36] Over the span of centuries, the name evolved toRoubaix as shown onMercator's map of Flanders published atLeuven in 1540.[37]
Parallel to the official and usual nameRoubaix, some translations are worth a mention. Firstly, though the city has never belonged to theFlemish-speaking area,[38] the seldom-heard renderingsRobeke[39][40] andRoodebeeke[41] are documented forRoubaix.[42] Furthermore, theDutch Language Union establishedRobaais as the city's properDutch name.[43] Lastly, one can citeRosbacum as the definiteLatin transcription ofRoubaix which has been in use since the 19th century, as recorded on dedication statements sealed in the first stones of the foundations of theHôtel de Ville (City Hall) laid in 1840 and the Church of Notre Dame laid in 1842.[44]
View of the city, dated 1699. Landscape with the castle, surrounded by a moat, next to theSainte-Elisabeth hospital at left, the mill at right and theSaint-Martin church, regarded as the city's centre point, at centre
The arms of Roubaix areblazoned: Party per pale ermine a chief gules and azure, thereon between two bobbins argent a five-pointed star or in chief, a wool-cards at its centre and a shuttle fesswise in base or, all within a bordure indented of the same.
Inhabitants of Roubaix are known in English as "Roubaisians" and in French asRoubaisiens (pronounced[ʁu.bɛ.zjɛ̃]) or in the feminine formRoubaisiennes (pronounced[ʁu.bɛ.zjɛn]), also natively calledRoubaignots (pronounced[ʁu.bɛ.njo]) or in the feminine formRoubaignotes (pronounced[ʁu.bɛ.njoz]).[48][49][50]
The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known through the population censuses carried out in the town since 1793 and the research study of Louis-Edmond Marissal, Clerk of the Peace of the city, published in 1844.[51] Roubaix evolved into a provincial market town until the end of theEarly modern period with a census population of 4,715 inhabitants in 1716.[51] By the late 18th century, the city began to emerge as regional textile manufacturing centre and its population increased, reaching a level of 8,091 in 1800. As a result of the industrialisation process of the 19th century, the need of workers was supplied byrural flight as well as immigration. Belgiansettlement was a feature of the Roubaisian life at that time.[54][55]
During the first-half period of the 19th century, Roubaix ranked the first French town in terms ofpopulation growth rate with a five times increase,[56] whereas in the remaining period of this century its population doubled. Within this last time framework, Belgian immigration appeared to be one of the major factor to explain the significantly high population growth, with 30,465 Belgian inhabitants counted in 1866 and 42,103 in 1872.[57] Nonetheless, therate of natural increase shew to be a more important component of the population growth in that period.[58]
At the 20th century threshold, the Roubaisian population reached a peak of 124,661, from which it progressively declined over the successive decades. Occupied by German troops from October 1914 to October 1918, Roubaix belonged to the combat zone of theWestern Front during theFirst World War.[59] Over thisoccupation period, Roubaisians suffered from dearth,deportation forcompulsory labour and unusual casualties[60] with a rather slight population drop from 122,723 to 113,265 between the 1911 and 1921 censuses.[61]
The population of the city was 98,828 as of January 2019.[8] This enables Roubaix to remain the third largest municipality in the regionHauts-de-France, after Lille andAmiens.
As of 2019, at least 25% of residents in Roubaix were immigrants, mainly ofArab, North African,Turkish, and Sub-Saharan African origin.[62][63][64]
Although the region of Roubaix was subjected many times to the domination of Flanders' rulers throughout its history, Roubaisians have used a localPicard variant as the language of everyday life for centuries. This spokenvernacular is locally known asRoubaignot.[65][66] Until the early 20th century thispatois prevailed.[67] Therefore, French language progressive penetration into local culture should not only be analysed as a result of the industrialisation and urbanisation of the area but should also be considered in terms ofpublic education policies.[49][68]
In the aftermath of theFranco-Prussian War and the German annexation ofAlsace-Lorraine, manyJews left their homes and emigrated.[69][70] Jewish arrival in Roubaix derives from that bitter period of history.[71][72] At the time, the new immigrant community, even though its small size, dedicated a building to Jewishfaith andliturgicalpractises.[72][73][74] The newly opened synagogue, located in a house at number 51 on the narrowrue des Champs,[72][74] operated more than 60 years, until 1939, when it was closed under imprecise local circumstances as theNazi regime took over in Europe.[74][75] Despite the closure of the synagogue, theoccupation andpolice raids,[note 1][77] the local practise ofJudaism saw a humble revival after thewar which lasted until the start of the 1990s when the modest Jewry of Roubaix handed over itsSefer Torah to the care of the Jewish community of Lille.[75] Roubaix has no longer been home to a Jewish place of worship since that event.[78] The house inside which the first one was created 123 years ago, has been demolished since anurban renewal project occurred in 2000.[72] On 10 September 2015 the mayor unveiled acommemorative plaque on therue des Champs, as a tribute to the Roubaisian Jewry, in memory of the religious purpose of this previous building.[75]
As of August 2013, there were sixmosques in the town, including one under construction. According to estimates by the mayor's office, around 20,000 people, or at least 20% of the population wereMuslims.[79][63] Over one-in-three residents in Roubaix are ofArab, North African,Turkish, and Sub-Saharan African origin.[62] Four areas of the cemetery were designated for Muslims.[80]
The city has been the place where illustrious names of French sculptors put their skills to create memorial monuments since the end of the 19th century until the middle of the 20th century. After a long slack period 2010 introduced a shift in the genre with the unveiling of Wim Delvoye's Discobolos, a statue of modern art conceived as a welcoming sign to a neighbourhood of the city.[100] The sculptures and memorial monuments in Roubaix which deserve notice for their historical or artistical interest are mentioned below.
Discobolos: aNew patrons project byWim Delvoye (sculptor), Bruno Dupont (mediator),Fondation de France and city of Roubaix (supporters), ordered by the neighbourhood residents with the members of the Hommelet neighbourhood committee[note 7] and inaugurated on 5 June 2010[101]
Memorial toJean-Baptiste Lebas: Albert de Jaeger (sculptor), funded through public subscription and inaugurated on 23 October 1949[102][103]
Memorial toResistance Martyrs of Roubaix: Albert de Jaeger (sculptor), engraved "Roubaix a ses martyrs de la Résistance" and "Ils ont brisé les chaînes de l'oppression",[note 8] ordered by the City council and inaugurated on 11 November 1948[104]
Memorial to Eugène Motte: Raoul Bénard (sculptor), Gustave Poubel (architect), funded through public subscription and inaugurated on 22 September 1935[102]
Memorial to Louis Bossut:Maxime Real del Sarte (sculptor), ordered by the City council and inaugurated on 4 October 1925[102][106]
Monuments aux Morts or World War I Memorial of Roubaix:Alexandre Descatoire (sculptor), Jean-Frédéric Wielhorski (architect), engraved "Roubaix à ses enfants morts pour la défense du pays et pour la paix",[note 9] ordered by the City council and inaugurated on 18 October 1925[107]
Memorial to Amédée Prouvost:Hippolyte Lefèbvre (sculptor), ordered by the City council and inaugurated on 29 October 1922[102]
Memorial to Pierre Destombes: Corneille Theunissen (sculptor), engraved "Hortorum, Musicae, Librorumque, Studiosus",[note 10] ordered by the City council and inaugurated on 29 October 1922[102][110]
Memorial to Gustave Nadaud:Alphonse-Amédée Cordonnier (sculptor), Gustave Leblanc-Barbedienne (art founder), inaugurated on 11 October 1896[102][111]
Roubaix has been home to two major museums of the region Hauts-de-France since the beginning of the 21st century:La Piscine[note 11] andLa Manufacture;[note 12] inheriting both of the local socioeconomic history.La Piscine, also known as theMusée d'Art & d'Industrie André Diligent,[note 13] is one of the most lauded cultural attractions in northern France. This museum is housed in theArt Deco-style former swimming pool of Roubaix, a building remodelled in 2000 to accommodate and exhibit 19th and 20th century collections of the city.[note 14] After being closed for two years of renovation works and extension, it was reopened to the public in October 2018, becoming more successful than ever before.[112]La Manufacture is the reference textile museum in northern France. It is hosted in an oldweaving factory.
The most prestigious names of painters, who made their reputation in Roubaix from the middle of the 19th century to the early 20th century areJean-Joseph Weerts[105] andRémy Cogghe.[113]
From the end of the Second World War to the beginning of the 1970s, a casual group of young artists from Roubaix and the surrounding region was formed and given the nameGroupe de Roubaix.[114][115][116] Two painters commonly associated with the group are Arthur Van Hecke and Eugène Leroy.[117][118][119]
Anxious to restore the prestige of northern France's textile industry and operating under the label ofMaisons de Mode, the cities of Lille and Roubaix have created spaces for newfashion designers to thrive since 2007. The Roubaisian location, next toLa Piscine museum, is known asLe Vestiaire.[note 15] There are fifteenboutiques and fashionstudios housed in an old industrial building.[120]
Roubaix has an old sporting heritage[143] and is home to the finish of one of the world's oldest races of professionalroad cycling at itsvelodrome:Paris–Roubaix, known as theHell of the North. While Roubaix is famous for its velodrome, there is more to this city than the cycling sports facilities.
The building of indoor and outdoor sports amenities in the city should be associated with its era of economic rise during the industrial revolution, in addition to the development of local sporting clubs and associations.[144]
During the 19th century, Roubaix acquired an international reputation for textile industry and wool production. In the 1970s and 1980s, international competition and automation caused an industrial decline and resulted in the closure of many factories. From that moment on and since the implementation of the French urban policy in the early 1980s, around three-fourths of the town's territory has been regularly assigned specific zoning designations as well as health and welfare plans.[145]
Roubaix's high level of unemployment is a consequence of the deindustrialisation. The town is listed among France's poorest cities.[99][146]Successive local governments have tried to address difficulties associated with deindustrialisation by attracting new industries, making the most of the town's cultural credentials[99] and organising a strong student presence on different campuses. While undergoing conversion efforts, the city is experimenting with new models and able to take advantage of successful economic stories, withonline retail andinformation technology, and seems to be on the way to reverse the decades of decline.[147]
OVH was created in Roubaix in 1999 and became a global IT infrastructure company, creating more than thousand jobs in the city and surroundings. Its head office is still in Roubaix.[153]
Ankama Games has established its head office in Roubaix since 2007.[154]
Blanchemaille, an e-commerce cluster helped by theincubator EuraTechnologies, has been established in the former building ofLa Redoute in Roubaix since 2014.[citation needed]
Roubaix's position in the motorway roads networkRoubaix and Tourcoing
A22 autoroute, a French part of theEuropean route E17 fromBurgundy toAntwerp, is the only motorway, within a motorway roads network of the highest density in France after Paris, which passes by Roubaix.
The city is served byLille Airport, which is located 20 km (12 mi) south of Roubaix. However, the airport provides direct routes to other parts of France, Europe and Morocco. The nearest international airport isBrussels Airport, located 127 km (79 mi) north east of Roubaix.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, deindustrialisation dramatically influenced major urban landscapes across thearrondissement of Lille.[155] Large areas ofbrownfield land came to mark the city of Roubaix. With the support of the local and national government programs, these areas are acquired and gradually restored or rebuilt.[citation needed]
Roubaix has one of the most efficient biomass district heating plant in France[156] and is therefore among the most advanced cities forsustainability in Hauts-de-France. Since 2014, the city has been engaged in several related initiatives aimed at moving to acircular economy and azero waste future.[157]
Jean-Baptiste Lebas (1898–1944): politician, mayor of Roubaix, deputy to the National Assembly,World War I andII resistance activist, died in deportation custody
Louis Loucheur (1872–1931): writer and politician, deputy to the National Assembly
Charles Vanden Bosch (1883–1945): Belgian Roman CatholicFranciscan priest, founder of the Belgian National work for theBlind, died in concentration camp
^ The Jewish population of Roubaix dropped from 160 members[75] in the beginning of its settlement to 68 in 1942.[76]
^UnderFrench State's dictatorship from 1940 to 1944, mayors of communes over 2,000 inhabitants were not elected democratically. The mayor was nominated by the government of MarshalPhilippe Pétain in communes of over 10,000 inhabitants and the prefet in communes less than 10,000 inhabitants and more than 2,000. The mayor in communes less than 2,000 inhabitants was elected by the city council. Mayors of communes of theZone interdite were nominated by prefects in agreement with the German authorities. Therefore, mayors are not affiliated to a political party for this period of time.[83][84]
^Jean-Baptiste Lebas's mandate was interrupted when he was arrested on 7 March 1915 by German authorities to be imprisoned in thefortress of Rastatt.
^Henri Thérin, the first deputy mayor, stood in forJean-Baptiste Lebas during his imprisonment time.
^Fleuris Vanherpe, the eldest deputy mayor of the city council, supplanted Jean-Baptiste Lebas after his forfeiture in June 1940, and was entrusted functions of mayor on 18 December 1940.[85] His death, on August 17, 1941, put an early end to his mandate.
^Victor Provo accepted the mandate in 1942.[86] He was maintained by resistance committees in 1944 then elected in April 1945.[87][88]
^A local association (as per the 1901 law about association) called "Comité de quartier de l'Hommelet"
^"Roubaix has its martyrs of the Resistance" and "They broke the chains of oppression"
^"Roubaix to his children died in defense of the country and for peace"
^Lecigne, Constantin (1911).Amédée Prouvost (in French). Paris, F: Bernard Grasset. p. 71.OCLC679906866. Retrieved17 March 2016.Roubaix donne l'impression d'une enclave américaine dans la France du Nord. C'est en même temps la ville de l'énergie frénétique et des fuites à travers le monde.
^Strikwerda, Carl (1984). Sweets, John F. (ed.). "Regionalism and Internationalism: The Working-Class Movement in the Nord and the Belgian Connection, 1871–1914".Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting of the Western Society for French History. 1983/1984. Lawrence (Kansas), USA: The University of Kansas: 222.hdl:2027/mdp.39015012965524.ISSN0099-0329.Contemporaries never tired of calling Roubaix an "American city," because of its raw, fast-growing character, or of referring to Roubaix and its sister cities of Lille and Tourcoing as the "French Manchester."
^Clark, Peter (29 January 2009).European Cities and Towns: 400–2000. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 246.ISBN978-0-199-56273-2. Retrieved1 October 2015.Roubaix was another new town, originally a craft village, whose many textile mills attracted a population of 100,000 and generated massive social and environmental problems.
^Lecluyse, Frédérick (16 December 2016)."MEL: on prend les mêmes ou presque et on recommence" [MEL: let's take the same ones, or almost, and start over].La Voix du Nord (in French).73 (349,ROUBAIX & SES ALENTOURS). Roubaix, F: 4.ISSN1277-1422.Bois-Grenier, Le Maisnil, Fromelles, Aubers et Radinghem-en-Weppes. Soit 6000 habitants supplémentaires pour une MEL qui compte désormais 90 communes…
^URBACT (29 May 2015)."Lille". Edinburgh, UK. Archived fromthe original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved22 July 2015.
^Neveu, Clarisse (15 December 2016)."Métropole Européenne de Lille: les vice-présidents et conseillers métropolitains délégués élus" [European Metropolis of Lille: elected vice-presidents and metropolitan delegate-councilors].MEL. Communiqué de presse (in French). Lille, F: Métropole Européenne de Lille. Retrieved18 December 2016.La fusion, effective au 1er janvier 2017, acte un élargissement historique du territoire de la Métropole Européenne de Lille, passant de 85 à 90 communes pour près d'1.2 million d'habitants.
^Nothomb, M. (1838).Canal de Bossuyt à Courtray & projets, annexes, enquêtes, etc … [Bossuit-Kortrijk Canal & projects, appendix, surveys, etc…] (in French). Brussels, B: H. Rémy, imprimeur du roi. p. 17. Retrieved21 September 2015.Le but primitif du canal était de fournir à la ville de Roubaix les eaux dont elle manquait, et de la mettre en communication avec le système de canaux du Nord et du Pas-de-Calais.
^Lille Metropolitan Council (2008). Ruant, Olivia; Edwards-May, David (eds.)."A strategic route, an economic necessity".EU programme Blue Links: restoration and reopening of the Deûle-Escaut canal between France and Belgium: Roubaix Canal, Espierre Canal and Marque canalised river. Lille Métropole Communauté Urbaine. Retrieved13 July 2015.
^Marion Gadault; Teddy Grandsire; Patrice Gonzalez; Laure Join-Lambert; Dominique Leonardi; Véronique Malek; Carmen Momenceau; Nathalia Momenceau; Catherine Ruget (2015). Devisme, Philippe; Join-Lambert, Patrick (eds.)."From Marquette to la frontière Belge".Fluviacarte, cartes et guides pour la navigation intérieure. Lattes, F: Editions de l'Écluse. Retrieved13 July 2015.
^Tellier, Thibault (16 March 2006). "Le développement urbain de Roubaix dans la première partie du XXe siècle". In David, Michel (ed.).Roubaix: cinquante ans de transformations urbaines et de mutations sociales [Fifty years of urban transformations and social mutations in Roubaix]. Histoire et civilisations (in French). Vol. 972. Villeneuve d'Ascq, F: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion. p. 43.ISBN978-2-859-39926-9.ISSN1284-5655. Retrieved21 July 2015.…c'est en fait le développement vers le sud qui semble le plus prometteur…
^Guinet, Louis (1982).Les emprunts gallo-romans au germanique (du Ier à la fin du Ve siècle) [The Gallo-Romance borrowings from Germanic (from the 1st century to the end of the 5th century)]. Bibliothèque française et romane. Série A, Manuels et études linguistiques; 44 (in French). Paris, F: Klincksieck. pp. 32–33.
^abvan Overstraeten, Jozef (1969).De Nederlanden in Frankrijk [Low Countries in France]. Beknopte encyclopedie (in Dutch). Antwerp, B: Vlaamse Toeristenbond. pp. 465–466.OCLC901682478. Retrieved22 June 2015.…881 of 887 villa Rusbaci ≺ Germ. rausa = riet + baki = beek…
^Trénard, Louis; Diligent, André (1984). Hilaire, Yves-Marie (ed.).Histoire de Roubaix [History of Roubaix]. Collection Histoire des villes du Nord/Pas-de-Calais (in French). Vol. 6. Dunkerque, F: Éditions Des Beffrois : Westhoek-Editions. p. 10.ISBN978-2-903-07743-3.OCLC14127874. Retrieved9 July 2015.
^van den Broecke, Marcel; van den Broecke-Günzburger, Deborah, eds. (2008)."Cartographica Neerlandica Topographical names for Ortelius Map No. 76".Cartographica Neerlandica. FLANDRIA "Gerardus Mercator Rupelmundanus Describebat" [Flanders, which Gerardus Mercator from Rupelmonde has depicted] "Cum priuilegio" [With privilege]. Bilthoven, NL: Marcel & Deborah van den Broecke. Retrieved21 May 2016.
^Tilly, Louise; Tilly, Charles (1 June 1981).Class Conflict and Collective Action. New Approaches to Social Science History. Vol. 1. Thousand Oaks (California), USA: Sage Publications. p. 170.ISBN978-0-803-91587-9. Retrieved27 July 2015.In some areas of France, Flemish was spoken by the natives; but since Roubaix lies just outside French Flanders, native Roubaisians spoke only French, hence the language disparity.
^Schuermans, Lodewijk Willem (1865).Algemeen Vlaamsch idioticon, Met Tijd en Vlijt [General Flemish idioticon, with time and assiduity] (in Dutch). Leuven, B: Gebroeders Vanlinthout. p. 268. Retrieved22 June 2015.
^Fortuné, Raymond (1899).Histoire du Hainaut français et du Cambresis [History of the French Hainaut and Cambresis] (in French). Paris, F: Editions Paul Lechevalier. p. 61. Retrieved22 June 2015.
^Schuermans, Lodewijk Willem; David, Jan Baptist; Du Bois, Pierre (1883).Bejvoegsel: aan het Algemeen Vlaamsch idioticon uitgegeven in 1865-1870 [General Flemish idioticon issued in 1865-1870] (in Dutch). Leuven, B: K. Fonteyn. p. 268.OCLC23400838. Retrieved24 February 2017.ROBAAIS, zoo las ik ergens vertaald den naam der fransche stad Roubaix, 't welk beter Roobeek of Robeke zou zijn
^Bowen, Reginald (1937).La formation du féminin de l'adjectif et du participe passé dans les dialectes normands, picards et wallons d'après l'Atlas linguistique de la France [The Feminine formation of adjectives and past participles in Norman, Picard and Wallon dialects according to the Linguistic Atlas of France] (in French). Paris, F: Librairie Droz.OCLC252979177.
^Ministère des affaires étrangères du royaume de Belgique (1873).Recueil consulaire, contenant les rapports commerciaux des agents belges à l'étranger. Vol. 19. Brussels, B: P. Weissenbruch, Imprimeur du Roi. p. 971.ISBN978-0-521-32208-9. Retrieved16 July 2015.D'après un recensement récent, la population de Roubaix s'élève aujourd'hui à 75,987 habitants, dont 42,103 belges. En 1866 le recensement accusait une population totale de 64,706 habitants, dont 30,465 belges.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
^Tilly, Charles (July 1983).Collective-action repertoires in five French provinces, 1789–1914(PDF). CRSO Working Paper. Vol. 300. Ann Arbor (Michigan), USA: University of Michigan. p. 17. Retrieved25 July 2015.In fact, the population of Lille-Roubaix-Tourcoing, a combat zone in World War I, fell slightly between 1901 and 1921.
^Landrecies, Jacques; Petit, Aimé (1 April 2003)."Picard d'hier et d'aujourd'hui" [Yesterday's and today's Picard].Bien dire et bien aprandre – Bulletin du Centre d'études médiévales et dialectales de l'Université de Lille III (in French) (21). Villeneuve d'Ascq, F: Centre de Gestion de l'Édition Scientifique (CEGES): 11.ISBN978-2-907-30105-3. Retrieved26 September 2015.…aborder le difficile problème de l'"accent", cette dernière marque qui subsiste quand le patois a disparu et qui, plus que tout, permet de distinguer l'Abbevillois de l'Artésien ou du "Roubaignot".
^Pooley, Timothy (9 October 2002). "The depicardization of the vernaculars of the Lille conurbation". In Jones, Mari C.; Esch, Edith (eds.).Language Change: The Interplay of Internal, External, and Extra-linguistic Factors. Contributions to the sociology of language. Vol. 86. Berlin, D: Walter de Gruyter GmbH. p. 34.ISBN978-3-110-17202-7.ISSN1861-0676. Retrieved27 July 2015.Viez notes the enduring prevalence of Picard in Roubaix in the early twentieth century despite progressive francization favoured by urbanization and industrialization
^Viez, Henri-Aimé (1978) [1st pub. 1910].Le parler populaire patois de Roubaix: étude phonétique [Patois of Roubaix: a phonetic study of the popular dialect] (in French). Geneva, CH: Slatkine Reprints. p. 7. Retrieved27 July 2015.…du parler populaire de Roubaix, tel qu'il était couramment employé avant que l'instruction primaire ne fût devenue obligatoire.
^Gopnik, Adam (9 May 1994). "A Reporter at Large: The Ghost of the Glass House".The New Yorker. New York (New York), USA: F-R Publishing Corporation. p. 58.ISSN0028-792X.Many of them had German names. They had fled from Alsace-Lorraine as the Franco-Prussian War ended, in 1871.
^Gilbert, Barbara C.; Fishel Deshmukh, Marion (30 September 2005).Max Liebermann: from realism to impressionism. Los Angeles (California), USA: Skirball Cultural Center. p. 202.ISBN978-0-970-42956-8. Retrieved28 September 2015.After Alsace-Lorraine territory is annexed by the German Empire, thousands of Alsatian Jews emigrate to France.
^Reboux, Alfred, ed. (5 October 1872)."Roubaix et le nord de la France" [Roubaix and northern France](PDF).Journal de Roubaix (in French).17 (3052). Roubaix, F: 2. Retrieved4 December 2017 – via Bibliothèque numérique de Roubaix.
^abcdViey, Frédéric; d'Almeida, Franck (June 2009).Histoire des communautés juives du Nord et de Picardie [History of the Jewish Communities of the North and Picardy Regions] (in French). Valenciennes, F: Synagogue de Valenciennes. pp. 24–25. Archived fromthe original on 15 November 2013. Retrieved27 September 2015.
^Cahen, Isidore; Prague, Hippolyte (1894).Archives israélites – Recueil politique et religieux [Israelite Archive – Political and religious reports] (in French). Vol. Tome LV. Paris, F: Bureau des Archives Israelites. p. 23. Retrieved27 September 2015.M. Maurice Marx, fils du ministre-officiant de la Synagogue de Roubaix, a été nommé dans le courant de novembre au commandement de la canonnière l'Onyx. Ce jeune officier est un ancien élève de l'École polytechnique.
^Wigoder, Geoffrey; Spector, Shmuel (1 January 2001)."K-Sered – Roubaix".The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust. Vol. 2. New York (New York), USA: New York University Press. p. 1098.ISBN978-0-814-7935-65. Retrieved27 September 2015.
^Michman, Dan (May 1998).Belgium and the Holocaust: Jews, Belgians, Germans. Jerusalem: Daf-Noy Press. pp. 335–336.ISBN978-9-653-08068-3.A massive round-up, i.e., large-scale random arrests, of Jews in northern France was conducted on September 11, 1942, at the same time as the one in Antwerp […] On October 27, 1943, the Germans arrested two Jewish families in Croix and Roubaix.
^Johannsen Rubin, Alissa (5 August 2013)."A French Town Bridges the Gap Between Muslims and Non-Muslims".The New York Times. Retrieved11 January 2016.In Roubaix, the mayor's office estimates that the Muslim population is as much as 20,000, or about 20 percent of the population.
^Centre francophone d'étude et d'enseignement sur le bouddhisme (2006)."Annuaire des Centres bouddhistes: Nord - Pas-de-Calais" [Directory for Buddhist communities: Nord - Pas-de-Calais].Institut d'Études Bouddhiques (in French). Paris, F: IEB. Archived fromthe original on 20 September 2017. Retrieved18 September 2016.
^État français (12 December 1940). "Loi du 16 novembre 1940 RELATIVE A LA REORGANISATION DES CORPS MUNICIPAUX" [Law of 16 November 1940 RELATED TO REORGANISATION OF MUNICIPAL BODIES].Journal Officiel de la République Française (in French).Imprimerie nationale: 6074.
^Pottrain, Martine (1993).Le Nord au cœur: historique de la Fédération du Nord du Parti socialiste, 1880–1993 [Nord at heart: history of the French socialist party federation of the Nord, 1880–1993] (in French). Lille, F: SARL de presse Nord-Demain.OCLC34886141.La loi de Vichy du 16 novembre 1940 réorganise l'administration communale : les maires et les conseillers municipaux sont désignés par le préfet, après accord des autorités allemandes.
^Piat, Jean (1985).Victor Provo: 1903–1983: Roubaix témoigne et accuse (in French). Dunkerque, F: Éditions Des Beffrois. p. 11.ISBN978-2-903-07747-1. Retrieved7 July 2015.Toutefois, Jean Lebas restera suspendu et le poste de maire sera confié, le 18 décembre 1940, au plus ancien adjoint : Fleuris Vanherpe.
^Jackson, Julian (26 April 2001).France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.ISBN978-0-191-62288-5. Retrieved9 September 2015.The pre-war mayor of Roubaix, Jean Lebas, who was involved in the Resistance from the beginning, had no qualms about encouraging his Socialist colleague Victor Provo to accept the post of mayor in 1942 on the grounds that the alternatives might be worse.
^Thyssen Geert; Herman Frederik; Kusters Walter; Van Ruyskensvelde Sarah; Depaepe Marc (20 December 2010). "From popular to unpopular education? The open-air school(s) of "Pont- Rouge", Roubaix (1921–1978)".History of Education & Children's Literature(PDF). Macerata, I: Edizioni Università di Macerata. p. 203.ISBN978-88-6056-252-4. Retrieved10 September 2015.…he was replaced successively by Fleuris Vanherpe, Marcel Guislain, Alphonse Verbeurgt, Charles Baudoin and Victor Provo. The latter, who was appointed by the Vichy regime, would be reinstalled as mayor of Roubaix after the war and govern the city from 1944 until 1977.
^Luquiens, Corinne, ed. (2011)."Base de données des députés français depuis 1789 – Victor PROVO" [Database on members of the French National Assembly since 1789 – Victor PROVO].Base de données historique des anciens députés (in French). Paris, F: Assemblée nationale. Retrieved26 September 2015.
^abCatrice, Paul; Provo, Victor; Trénard, Louis; Teneul, Georges-François (1969).Roubaix au-delà des mers (in French). Roubaix, F: Société d'émulation de Roubaix. p. 26.OCLC493340579. Retrieved7 July 2015.
^Passarelli, Pasquale (1999).Toscana. Comuni d'Italia (in Italian). Monteroduni (Isernia), I: Istituto enciclopedico italiano. p. 293.ISBN978-8-887-98326-5. Retrieved7 July 2015.
^"Roubaix".Sosnowiec laczy. Urzad Miejski w Sosnowcu. 9 June 2006. Retrieved5 July 2015.
^"ROUBAIX (França)".Covilhã Município (in Portuguese). Câmara Municipal da Covilhã. 20 October 2000. Retrieved7 July 2015.
^Artconnexion (5 June 2010)."Wim Delvoye / Discobolos".Artconnexion: contemporary art production and mediation consultants. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^Société internationale des Nouveaux commanditaires (2010). Legierse, Thérèse (ed.)."Wim Delvoye – Discobolos".Les Nouveaux Commanditaires. Brussels, B. Retrieved31 March 2016.
^Médiathèque de Roubaix (1980)."Monument Jean Lebas".Bibliothèque numérique de Roubaix (in French). Roubaix, F: Mairie de Roubaix. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^Piat, Jean (1985).Victor Provo: 1903–1983: Roubaix témoigne et accuse (in French). Dunkerque, F: Éditions Des Beffrois. p. 50.ISBN978-2-903-07747-1. Retrieved20 July 2015.Le 11 novembre 1948, le ciseau du grand prix de Rome, le Roubaisien Albert de Jaeger, grava leur souvenir dans la pierre d'un monument Aux Martyrs de la Résistance, érigé sur l'ancienne place Chevreul.
^Institut de Recherches Historiques du Septentrion (21 April 2015)."Monument à Roubaix".Les monuments aux morts France et Belgique (in French). Laboratoire UMR CNRS IRHiS Institut de Recherches Historiques du Septentrion Université de Lille. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^Social Democratic Federation (1925).Social-democrat: Incorporating Justice. Vol. 42 to 44. London, UK: Executive Committee of the Social-Democratic Federation. p. 32. Retrieved19 July 2015.In Roubaix, which has a Socialist majority on the town council, a memorial will be unveiled on Easter Sunday, in honour of Jules Guesde, the great pioneer of Marxian Socialism in France.
^"Monument à Jules Guesde – Roubaix".2015 E-monumen (in French). E-monumen.net Base de données Géolocalisée du patrimoine monumental Français et Étranger. 17 December 2013. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^"Monument à Pierre Destombes – Roubaix".2015 E-monumen (in French). E-monumen.net Base de données Géolocalisée du patrimoine monumental Français et Étranger. 16 December 2013. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^"Monument à Gustave Nadaud – Roubaix".2015 E-monumen (in French). E-monumen.net Base de données Géolocalisée du patrimoine monumental Français et Étranger. 21 December 2013. Retrieved19 July 2015.
^Cordonnier, Aude; Jaubert, Bruno (11 November 1998).Arthur van Hecke: œuvres 1946–1998 (in French). Dunkirk, F: Dunkerque : Musée des Beaux-Arts.ISBN978-2-906363-11-3.
^Delporte, Michel; Gaudichon, Bruno; Vandierendonck, René (20 December 1997).Le Groupe de Roubaix: Le Nord Pas-de-Calais s'ouvre: l'art contemporain, 1946–1970. Cahier du patrimoine roubaisien (in French). Vol. 3. Roubaix, F: Musée d'art et d'industrie de Roubaix.
^Verbeke, Dirk (1989)."De Franse Nederlanden: actualiteiten" [The French Netherlands: News].Ons Erfdeel. Jaargang 32 (in Dutch). Deel 2. Raamsdonksveer, NL: Stichting Ons Erfdeel: 299. Retrieved17 March 2016.Leroy, Roulland en Van Hecke behoorden tot de 'Groep van Roubaix'.
^Dulas, Régis, ed. (January 2015).""Discount" vu par son équipe".e-clap.fr (in French). Hellemmes, F: E-clap, Amoureux de tous les cinemas. Retrieved12 July 2015.
^Агаронян, Армине (July 2009).Андрей Звягинцев покорил Ереван [Andrey Zvyagintsev won Yerevan] (in Russian). Moscow, RU: Международная еврейская газета (МЕГ) – International Jewish Newspaper (IJN). Retrieved12 July 2015.…и кто-то посоветовал, городок Рубе на севере Франции. Это оказалось именно тем, что мы искали…
^Deroy, Pascal, ed. (1994)."Le Maître-nageur" (in French). Wattignies, F: CinEmotions.com. Archived fromthe original on 19 August 2016. Retrieved12 July 2015.
^Jerome, Jerome Klapka; Pain, Barry, eds. (1899).To-day. Vol. 22. London, UK: W.A. Dunkerley. p. 215. Retrieved28 July 2015.The sport is very popular in the North of France, some fifty odd clubs existing in or near Roubaix, where a very large meeting was recently held.
^Waret, Philippe; Popelier, Jean-Pierre (1 July 2005). Sutton, Alan (ed.).Roubaix: ville de sport [Roubaix: a sporting city]. Mémoire du sport (in French). Saint-Avertin, F: Éditions Alan Sutton.ISBN978-2-84910-155-1.
^Smith, Michael Stephen (14 February 2006).The Emergence of Modern Business Enterprise in France, 1800–1930. Harvard studies in business history. Vol. 49. Cambridge (Massachusetts), USA: Harvard University Press. p. 489.ISBN978-0-674-01939-3.ISSN0073-067X. Retrieved23 July 2015.One of these was Pinault-Printemps-Redoute, a major retailing firm created by the merger of the Printemps-Prisunic department store chain and La Redoute, a leading mail-order house founded by a family of Roubaix wool spinners in the 1920s.
^Baren, Maurice (16 September 1992).How it all began: the stories behind those famous names. Leeds, UK: Smith Settle. p. 31.ISBN978-1-870-07192-5. Retrieved23 July 2015.In the French town of Roubaix in the 1950s, three brothers, members of the Despature family, had a weaving business manufacturing fine woollen cloths.
^Derdak, Thomas (2009). Grant, Tina (ed.).International Directory of Company Histories. Gale virtual reference library. Vol. 98. Farmington Hills (Michigan), USA: St. James Press. pp. 85–87.ISBN978-1-558-62619-5.
^Dubois, Guy (11 October 2012).Le Nord Pas-de-Calais Pour les Nuls [Nord Pas-de-Calais for dummies]. Pour les Nuls Culture Générale (in French). Paris, F: Éditions First & First Interactive. p. 164.ISBN978-2-754-03547-7.
^Hutchinson, Lucille (28 November 2016)."Chauffage urbain au bois à Roubaix" [Wood biomass district heating systems of Roubaix] (in French). Loos-en-Gohelle, F: Centre Ressource du Développement Durable.