Champs Elysées, Carré Rive Gauche, Grands boulevards and the Eiffel Tower
"I have before my eyes the five thousand acres of the earth where the most thinking, speaking and writing has been accomplished"...
In making this admiring statement, the writer Jean Giraudoux neatly summarizes the challenge. Everything has already been said : which Paris? The French Capital and its qualities? The renowned "city of light"? The city of famous monuments and museums? Of the most beautiful avenue in the world and of its fashionable districts? The Paris of postcards and its lightning 48-hour visits? Of world-famous films and songs? Of the popular districts? The Paris of the banks of the Seine and the heights of Montmartre? The town of intellectuals or that of the popular Parisian "titis"? There are a hundred Parises, there are a thousand. Let's humbly try to recall a few of them...
The Paris of French history. It's the story of a little island called Ile of the Cite. Conquered by the Romans. Transformed into Lutece. Chosen by Clovis as the capital of the Frankish kingdom. Expanded by the Capetian kings and their successors. At the center of all of the most important moments in our history, the Wars of Religion, the Hundred Years War, the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the Napoleonic period, the War of 1870, and the two world wars of the 20th century. Three times the French government left Paris, three of the most dramatic episodes of the nation's history. Conversely, the Liberation of Paris in August 1944 was an explosion of collective joy, and a deeply symbolic act for the entire country.
The Paris of historic monuments. They are the primary draw for tourists arriving from the four corners of the world. They have been photographed from every angle. Nothing is left to chance. Each has its own history, each was built according to a patiently developed plan, with a particular perspective in mind. To get even closer to the incomparable Parisian architectural heritage, tour guides offer themed visits that correspond to individual tastes: Gothic Paris, Notre-Dame and Sainte-Chapelle; Paris' royal squares, Concorde, Victoires, Dauphine, or Vosges. Paris of the Enlightenment, of the Second Empire, of the Opera and the urban planning of Haussmann, of private mansions, of fountains and gardens, etc. Each site has a history, often rich with anecdotes and enigmas...
The Paris of Museums. Like the monuments, many are enormous, world famous, and house objects, paintings, and sculptures that are among the most important in the artistic history of humanity. Art lovers do not hesitate to circle the planet to visit them: the Louvre, the Musee d'Orsay, the Grand Palais, the Modern Art Museum, the Orangerie, the Marmottan, the recently opened Quai Branly Museum, the Pompidou Center, etc. In addition to these "cultural locomotives," Paris is also home to over a hundred smaller museums devoted to an astounding diversity of themes, as well as the preservation of heritage, traditions, and cultures: publicity, cinema, photography, mankind, natural history, technical achievements, famous people, civilizations, costumes, religious history, science and industry, etc.
The Paris of the Seine. It has often been said that the story of the city and its river is a love story. In general, for the better, but during certain periods (floods), for the worse. For centuries travelers used boats, and most merchandise, meats and other foodstuffs, coal, and wood was transported on the Seine, which was for the most part navigable. The river played a crucial role in the development of the city. The Left and Right Banks were constructed around the river, which remains an essential element of the landscape, with its quays, its bridges, its traffic, and its monuments. The largest squares, Concorde, Invalides, Champs de Mars, and most of the major monuments are built near the banks of the river: the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, the Conciergerie, the Louvre, the Tuileries, the National Library of France, the Arab World Institute, Trocadero, and of course, the Eiffel Tower. Today, the bateau-mouche is an excellent way to first discover the heart of Paris and its quays. Each designated a historic monument, lovers still consider these riverbanks the ideal setting for a romantic stroll.
Paris for ramblers. For tourists who like to wander aimlessly, who value the element of the unexpected, Paris is a magical city. Balzac wrote: "Paris is a veritable ocean. Cross it. Describe it...there is always a pristine spot, an unknown lair..." One need only look up to discover the façade of a superbly decorated hôtel particulier, or mansion, an entryway that opens into a small courtyard, or a statue in a niche...or stop in front of store windows, the most prestigious to the most humble, that are part of the urban decor. Push open the door of a bistro or a literary cafe. Seek out the exotic in this utterly cosmopolitan city. Find yourself nose to nose with the dreams and fantasies of architects: a Chinese house, a Tibetan temple, a Tunisian palace or an Assyrian temple. One need only walk up a few stairs in Montmartre to see the famous rooftops of Paris, the inextricable tangle of colors, or to sit on a bench in a tiny neighborhood square or public garden where children play, or to enter a church found on a detour, or walk into an artist's studio in Montparnasse, or into one of the cemeteries where famous writers, intellectuals, and artists rest. Discovery is always just around the corner.
The Paris of writers. Their pens have described the essential episodes of French history, both small and large scale: revolutions and wars, protests, literary salons, the capital's most difficult moments, as well as crazy nights in the cabarets. During the age of Enlightenment, Voltaire, Diderot, and the Encyclopedists, Beaumarchais and Marivaux recount Parisian life. In the 19th century, the capital inspires the major works of Victor Hugo and Balzac, and becomes a character in Les Miserables and The Human Comedy. Zola's novels realistically describe life in the poor neighborhoods. Up until the present day, typically Parisian characters populate novels, plays, and films, from the surly, working-class "Titi" to the chatterbox concierge, as well as the fruit seller, the bookseller on the quays, the rioter, the bourgeois snob, or the drunk. Paris has always been a muse to poets and novelists.
The Paris of painters. Paris has always been a creative center, and during certain periods it was the artistic capital of the world. An obligatory stop for creative artists, especially during the first decades of the 20th century when modern art was born. Artists from all over the world could be found in Montmartre and Montparnasse—painters, sculptors, writers, and musicians. Among them, Picasso, Matisse, Braque, Modigliani, Man Ray, Max Jacob, Apollinaire, Jarry, Aragon, Breton, etc. The Impressionists, the Cubists, the Fauvists, the Surrealists—everyone! Who can forget the extraordinary destiny of the Bateau-Lavoir, a decrepit old building in Montmartre that sheltered several budding geniuses. A profusion of ideas and creativity germinated under its ragged roof. Picasso painted "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" there, a painting/manifesto of Cubism. This was the age of Matisse, Dufy, Bonnard, Vlaminck, Derain, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, Renoir, Monet, Pissarro, not to mention Toulouse Lautrec, painter of cabarets and other torrid nightspots in the capital.
The Paris of song. No other city has been the subject of so many poems and songs. Endless refrains celebrating the quays and bridges of the Seine, squares, streets, rooftops, bistros, and train stations, and typical Parisian characters. The city is often personified as a beautiful woman: "Paris, queen of the world, Paris like a blonde with a turned up nose, a tease...." Edith Piaf sang about street urchins, Yves Montand "...likes to stroll on the Grand Boulevards." The Seine "flows, flows, flows when it comes into Paris." During the Liberation, a joyful Paris sang "it's a Parisian flower, old Paris is smiling." Every hour of the day and night, Paris is alive. Jacques Dutronc sings "It's five o'clock, Paris is waking up...." The night owl hums: "a little Metro station, surrounded by bistros, Pigalle..." Thousands of popular tunes.
The Shopper's Paris. Paris is a fashion capital, the city of haute couture, of designers, of the most famous labels. Paris is the incontestable capital of good taste. A "chic Parisian" is a reference point. Haute couture, born in Paris during the Belle Epoque, continues to be an element of the capital's and the country's international image. The collections of French designers still make the media swoon and feed the public's dreams. The capital of not only clothing fashions, but also jewelry and perfumes, which can be found in luxury boutiques and department stores. Certain of the latter are such an integral part of the Parisian landscape that they are almost as popular as the Eiffel Tower with visiting foreigners.
Paris by night. Its legendary concert halls, operas, and theaters are known by one and all. What other city can offer 300 theatrical events each night, in every style, from classics to comedy to avant-garde? What other city can offer such a vast choice of small theaters, cabarets, comedy clubs, jazz clubs, discotheques, wine bars, and hip restaurants? Not to mention the dancing girls of the Moulin Rouge, the Lido, and the Paradis Latin?
Gourmet Paris. If Paris is known for one thing, it is its culinary savoir-faire. It is legendary. The most basic example is the Parisian baguette, which has become the symbol of French bread, but there is also the jambon de Paris, or Paris ham, the "King's cake" served at Epiphany, and the champignon de Paris, the local mushroom that used to grow in the city's limestone tunnels. If you ask for meat cooked "a la Parisienne", it will be cooked to perfection. Imagination rules in the most intricate recipes as well as everyday cooking. An inventiveness that is fed by the fact that the best products from the country's best farmland converge here. As do the best chefs. The best of the best come to Paris to hone their talents at the capital's finest restaurants. If there were one city in the world that could be called the gastronomic capital of the world, many would name Paris.
Boutique hotels and designer Bbs in Paris, Business hotels and Secret places