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File:Storm King from across Hudson.jpg
A corniche carrying New York State Route 218 along Storm King Mountain can be seen on the left from across the Hudson River
File:Hawks' Nest.jpg
The Hawk's Nest is part of a corniche which carries New York State Route 97 above the Delaware River

A corniche is a road on the side of a cliff or mountain, with the ground rising up on one side of the roadway and falling away on the other. The English language has adopted the word from the French term {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or "road on a ledge", itself derived from the Italian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, for "ledge".

EuropeEdit

FranceEdit

Three famed corniche roads of the Côte d'Azur in the French Riviera run between the sea and mountains from Nice eastward toward Menton. They are known as the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}<ref>Life in Riviera</ref>) along the coast, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} slightly inland, and the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} along the upper cliffs.<ref>Roads of the French Rivera</ref>

The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} passes through the principality of Monaco. The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} featured prominently in the Alfred Hitchcock film To Catch a Thief.

ItalyEdit

The Amalfi Drive, along the Amalfi Coast south of Naples, is a road carved into the cliffs along the Tyrrhenian Sea, and can be classified as a corniche. It runs between Sorrento and Amalfi and was originally built by the Romans.

AfricaEdit

SenegalEdit

The coastal road facing the Atlantic Ocean in the capital city of Dakar is called the Corniche Ouest and runs along a cliff above the beaches and rocky shores.

South AfricaEdit

Many of the roads running around the Cape Peninsular, south of Cape Town, have been constructed in the form of corniches. A good example is part of Victoria Road running through the suburbs of Clifton and Bantry Bay.

LibyaEdit

The Tripoli Corniche, also known as Al-Fatah Street, runs along the Mediterranean from the Waddan Bridge to the roundabout at Tripoli's sea port entrance.

EgyptEdit

Any waterfront passage along a body of water is classed as a corniche in Egypt. Most Nile valley and Delta cities overlooking the 1000 km river course and two branches in the country have one or two corniche streets (east and/or west banks). For example "Corniche Giza" and "Corniche Cairo", the longest Egyptian corniche. Other cities such as Mansoura, Damietta and Luxor also have corniches.

  • The 18 km Corniche al-Nil Street (Arabic: شارع كورنيش النيل) promenade in Cairo (east bank of the Nile) runs from the Maadi district in the south, to the mouth of the Ismailia Canal in al-Sahel district in the north. Building numbers take on one to two digits in Maadi where numbering starts, where for example the Holiday Inn hotel is 29 A Corniche al-Nile,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> and up to four digits in the northern half due to it length, where the Ramses Hilton hotel's address in Bulaq is 1115 Corniche al-Nil.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The street colloquially takes on the names of some of the districts and neighbourhoods it passes through such as the Maadi Corniche,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Corniche Masr al-Qadima (Old Cairo).

File:Alexandria - Egypt.jpg
The corniche at Alexandria by sunset, stretching along the city's residential coast line

Though the word itself comes from French, the Egyptian usage has led neighboring Arab countries, which are not francophone and have no French influence, to adopt the word. These include Sudan, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar.Template:Citation needed

Middle EastEdit

QatarEdit

This is a waterfront promenade extending for Template:Convert along Doha Bay in Qatar's capital city, Doha. Annual celebrations of national holidays such as Qatar National Day and National Sports Day are centered on the Doha Corniche. It is a popular tourist and leisure attraction within Qatar.

LebanonEdit

The avenue that runs along the western and northern coast of the Beirut peninsula is colloquially called Corniche Beirut.

OmanEdit

The promenade along the waterfront in Muttrah, Muscat, is known as The Corniche.

United Arab EmiratesEdit

Saudi ArabiaEdit

Dammam corniche, Qatif corniche, Khobar corniche, Ras Tanura corniche, Jeddah Corniche, Yanbu corniche, Al Jubail corniche, Khafji corniche.

IraqEdit

File:Basra Corniche.jpg
The corniche in Basra

In Basra, the corniche runs along the Shatt al-Arab

Southeast AsiaEdit

PhilippinesEdit

India

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

fr:Corniche (homonymie)