Cannes

Cannes is known for its film festival, port, and long seaside promenade. The city has a clear internal contrast between the historic Le Suquet district and the modern waterfront. It remains a structured Mediterranean resort rather than a single-purpose attraction.

What the sources say

Cannes[a] is a resort city located on the French Riviera. It is located in the Alpes-Maritimes department of Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur, and is the host city of the annual Cannes Film Festival, Midem, and Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. The city is known for its association with the rich and famous, its luxury hotels and restaurants, and for several conferences.

History
By the 2nd century BC, the Ligurian Oxybii established a settlement here known as Aegitna (Ancient Greek: Αἴγιτνα). Historians are unsure what the name means, but the connection to Greek αἴγες “waves, surf” seems evident. The second element could be compared to the Cretan and Thessalian towns of Itanos (Ἴτανος) and Iton (Ἴτων); also phonetically close is the Aetolian town of Aegitium (Αἰγίτιον). The area was a fishing village used as a port of call between the Lérins Islands.

In 154 BC, it became the scene of violent but quick conflict between the troops of Quintus Opimius and the Oxybii.

In the 10th century, the town was known as Canua. The name may derive from “canna”, a reed. Canua was probably the site of a small Ligurian port, and later a Roman outpost on Le Suquet hill, suggested by Roman tombs discovered here. Le Suquet housed an 11th-century tower, which overlooked the swamps where the city now stands. Most of the ancient activity, especially protection, was on the Lérins Islands, and the history of Cannes is closely tied to the history of the islands.

An attack by the Saracens in 891, who remained until the end of the 10th century, devastated the country around Canua. The insecurity of the Lérins islands forced the monks to settle on the mainland, at the Suquet. Construction of a castle in 1035 fortified the city then known as Cannes, and at the end of the 11th century construction was started on two towers on the Lérins islands. One took a century to build.

Around 1530, Cannes detached from the monks who had controlled the city for hundreds of years and became independent.

During the 18th century, both the Spanish and British tried to gain control of the Lérins Islands but were chased away by the French. The islands were later controlled by many, such as Jean-Honoré Alziary and the Bishop of Fréjus. They had many different purposes: in the middle of the 19th century, one served as a hospital for soldiers wounded in the Crimean War.

Henry Brougham, 1st Baron Brougham and Vaux bought land at the Croix des Gardes “about the year 1838, when it was little more than a fishing village on a picturesque coast” and constructed the villa Eleonore-Louise; Brougham's work to improve living conditions attracted the English aristocracy, who also built winter residences.

The 19th century saw the modernization of Cannes, spearheaded by Marie de Lametz and her son, Prince Charles III, to follow the successes of nearby Nice and the successful gambling industry in Bad Homburg. After several failures in 1850s, the late 1860s saw an expansion of casino, villas, hotels, roads and railway (the distance from Paris to Cannes reduced to 23 hours). The Hôtel de Ville was completed in 1876.

During the repression of January and February 1894, the police conducted raids targeting the anarchists living there, without much success.

At the end of the 19th century, several more railways were completed, which prompted the arrival of streetcars. In Cannes, projects such as the Boulevard Carnot and the rue d'Antibes were carried out. After the closure of the Casino des Fleurs (hôtel Gallia), a luxury establishment was built for the rich winter clientele, the Casino Municipal next to the pier Albert-Edouard. This casino was demolished and replaced by the new Palace in 1979.

In the 20th century, new luxury hotels such as the Carlton, Majestic, Martinez, and JW Marriott Cannes were built. The city was modernised with a sports centre, a post office, and schools. There were fewer British and German tourists after the First World War, but more Americans. Winter tourism gave way to summer tourism, and the summer casino at Palm Beach was constructed.

In 1931, Karan Singh, the crown prince of Jammu and Kashmir, was born at the Martinez Hotel.
The city council had the idea of starting an international film festival shortly after World War II.
On 3 November 2011, it hosted the 2011 G20 summit.
In 2021, Cannes was designated as the City of Film by the UNESCO Creative Cities Network.

Wikipedia, „Cannes” (CC BY-SA 4.0), wikipedia.org, 2026/01/09.

My view

Wikipedia associates Cannes mainly with the film festival, which is accurate—but incomplete. Cannes has two faces: the one from the red carpet, and the one that functions quietly for the other eleven months of the year.

Seen only through the festival lens, Cannes is easy to misjudge. It is not a one-dimensional place, even if it is often presented that way.

The festival as an episode, not a definition

The Cannes Film Festival is a global event and impossible to ignore. From the city’s perspective, however, it is a short, intense episode that strongly alters the rhythm—and then disappears just as quickly.

Outside the festival period, Cannes returns to a normal pace. The promenade, port, old town, and beaches work without media pressure. That is when the city shows how it actually functions.

Le Suquet and everyday Cannes

The old town of Le Suquet reveals a different side of Cannes. Calm, slightly detached from the Croisette, with narrow streets and views over the port, it balances the image of the city as a luxury resort.

A short walk away from the Croisette is enough to find a completely different Cannes—more local, ordinary, and often genuinely pleasant to live in.

Luxury that is not everywhere

Cannes is associated with luxury, but it does not dominate the entire city. It is concentrated in specific places and moments. Beyond them, Cannes is simply a large coastal city with full infrastructure.

That matters—it allows Cannes to be seen without extremes: neither idealised nor rejected.

Is it worth it

Cannes makes sense if:

  • you want to understand the contrasts of the French Riviera,
  • you are curious about the city beyond its festival image,
  • you like places with multiple layers.

It may disappoint if:

  • you expect glamour everywhere,
  • you prefer the quiet of small towns,
  • urban character is not what you are looking for.

For me, Cannes is worth seeing, but not idealising. That is exactly its value.

Cannes on map

How this place fits into my tours

This place appears in my routes when it naturally fits the day, the direction of travel, and the season. Sometimes it is one of the main points of the tour; other times it is a quiet stage along the way. It all depends on how the day is planned.

I treat ready-made tours as a starting point, not a closed script. If something needs to be shortened, extended, reordered, or combined with another place, we adjust as we go. We don’t move “from point to point”—we build a day that makes sense and feels comfortable.

You can see this place in tours such as:

If none of the ready-made routes fits perfectly, a tailor-made tour offers full flexibility. We can focus on one place, combine several stops, or build the day entirely from scratch. I take care of the route and logistics, and the plan is adjusted to you—not the other way around.

  • Tour: Cinematic Riviera

    The route includes Saint-Tropez, Port Grimaud and Cannes – towns known from films, festivals and iconic harbour scenes. From former film locations to promenades and marinas, this tour shows the French Riviera as it appears in European cinema and popular culture.

  • Planer

    Tour: A Day Exclusively for You

    This is a day without a preset plan. We can focus on one place, combine several towns or follow a specific theme. The route is shaped entirely around what you want to see – Nice, the coast, the hills or less obvious locations away from the main routes.