Auray, town, Morbihan département, Bretagne (Brittany) région, northwestern France, on the Auray estuary. It is situated 7.5 miles (12 km) from the Atlantic, southwest of Rennes.
Its château (demolished 1558) was a residence of the dukes of Brittany. Outside its walls in 1364 the War of the Breton Succession was ended by the victory of Jean de Montfort and his English allies over Montfort’s cousin, Charles de Blois. The battle involved two French military folk-heroes, Bertrand du Guesclin and Olivier de Clisson. The church erected on the battleground by Montfort is now a school for the deaf. In 1795 on the nearby Champ des Martyrs, 952 Chouans, local antirevolutionary guerrillas, were killed.
The quarter of Saint-Goustan, in which Benjamin Franklin, as a member of the American Commission, stayed in 1776, is a picturesque neighbourhood of 15th-century houses. Auray’s Gothic-Renaissance Basilica of Sainte-Anne d’Auray is a noted place of pilgrimage in Brittany. Auray is a small service centre with some industry (wood products and processed foods). Local oyster beds are also renowned. Tourism has expanded, centred around the town’s port and yachting harbour. Pop. (1999) 10,911; (2014 est.) 13,397.