Place:Seine-Saint-Denis, France

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NameSeine-Saint-Denis
Alt namesSeine-St-Denissource: Webster's Geographical Dictionary (1984)
TypeDépartement
Coordinates48.917°N 2.583°E
Located inFrance     (1964 - )
Also located inÎle-de-France, France    
See alsoSeine, Île-de-France, FranceParent
Val-d'Oise, Île-de-France, FranceParent
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

In 2019, it had a population of 1,644,903 across 40 communes. In French, the learned but rarely used demonym for the inhabitants of Seine-Saint-Denis is ; more common is .

History

the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

was created in January 1968, through the implementation of a law passed in July 1964. It was formed from the part of the (hitherto larger) Seine department to the north and north-east of the Paris ring road (and the line of the old city walls), together with a small slice taken from .

has a history as a veritable left-wing stronghold, belonging to the  (red belt) of Paris. The French Communist Party especially has maintained a continued strong presence in the department, and still controls the city councils in cities such as ,  and . Until 2008,  and  were the only departments where the Communist Party had a majority in the general councils but the 2008 cantonal elections saw the socialists become the strongest group at the  general council (while the Communist Party gained a majority in  and lost it in 2015).

A commune of , , was the scene of the death of two youths which sparked the nationwide riots of autumn 2005. In October and November, 9,000 cars were burned and 3,000 rioters were arrested.

In 2018, the department had the highest crime rate in metropolitan France. In 2017, the area was the theatre of 18% of all drug offences in metropolitan France.[1]

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