Vieilles Charrues Festival

The Vieilles Charrues Festival (French: Festival des Vieilles Charrues, pronounced [fɛstival de vjɛj ʃaʁy]; Breton: Gouel an Erer Kozh, pronounced [ˈɡweːl ãn ˈeˑrɛr ˈkoːs]; literally: Old Ploughs Festival) is held every year in mid-July in the city of Carhaix, western Brittany, France.

This festival is the largest music festival in France, attracting more than 280,000 festival-goers every year (346,000 in 2023).[1] This festival was created in 1992 in Landeleau, a small village in central Finistère. At that time, less than 500 revellers attended and the festival was more like a private party. The following year, the festival welcomed more than 2,000 people. In 1995, due to lack of space on the original site, the festival moved to Carhaix city centre, and in 1998—for the same reason—the festival chose a site on the outskirts of Carhaix. In October 2016, the festival organised a concert in New York City's Central Park in tribute to the many Bretons who were immigrants to the city in the nineteenth century.[citation needed]

Each year, more than 7,000 volunteers enable the festival to be a success, with their actions in the numerous bars, restaurants, and other stands of the festival. The festival thanks them by giving money to local associations. The organisers also helped to finance Hall Glenmor, a concert hall, and to renovate the Château de Kerampuil, a castle located near the festival site.

Vieilles Charrues Festival 2016 - Panoramic view on stage
  1. ^ "Festival des Vieilles Charrues : l'événement breton a rassemblé 346 000 personnes, un nouveau record". Franceinfo (in French). 2023-07-17. Retrieved 2023-07-18.

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