Paris Travel

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Paris is the city of a thousand clichés, the City of Lights and Hemmingways much quoted Moveable Feast amongst them, but for once it is also a city that justifies the hype. The French capital is one of the worlds truly great cities, a metropolis that lavishly satisfies the desires of tourists and business people alike and manages to retain a standard of living that makes becoming a Parisian so alluring.

The city dramatically wears its history on its sleeve and today it is still centred around the Ile de la Cité, where over two thousand years ago Celtic tribes first eked out a living. The Romans were later drawn to this strategic location in the middle of the Seine, a natural crossroads between Germany and Spain, and took control in 52BC. Despite English rule between 1420 and 1436, a series of French kings brought about the centralisation of France, with Paris at its cultural, political and economic heart.

Despite its large size and population almost everything worth seeing is contained within the ring road, the Boulevard Périphérique. The compact centre is easily navigable on foot, with the efficient and comprehensive Métro system always on hand to ease tired limbs. The lifeblood River Seine splits the city neatly in two and the useful arrondissements system neatly carves Paris into manageable chunks.

The history of Paris can be uncovered throughout its distinctive districts. Hilly Montmartre, with its village atmosphere, was where the Paris Commune began in 1871; the Marais evokes medieval Paris, its winding streets a sharp contrast to the wide, orderly Haussmann boulevards, envisaged by Napoleon III to keep the mobs at bay. These grand 19th-century avenues still dominate the city, interspersed with modern flourishes. The grands travaux (large projects) of Président Mitterrand added the Grande Arche de la Défense, the ultra-modern Opéra de la Bastille, the impressive Institut du Monde Arabe, and plonked a glass pyramid in the central courtyard of the Louvre.

The varied populations within Paris define the citys atmosphere just as much as its landmarks. The French establishment resides comfortably in the smart 16th arrondissement, while African and Eastern European immigrants live less lavishly in areas such as up-and-coming Belleville and the Goutte dOr. The Jewish quarters include the shabby Sentier and trendy Marais district; the latter is also Paris gay centre. Emerging areas include Bercy, where new flats, bars and restaurants are drawing a youthful and moneyed crowd east.

Paris is a city with a varied climate that conjures up its own seasonal delights. In summer, when the mercury rises, the locals flock to the new Paris Plage, where a riverside expressway is converted for a month between July and August into an oasis of swimming pools, sand and deckchairs. The best time to visit is, of course, during the famous Paris Spring between April and June, when the days are sunny but not too hot. The autumn and winter months are another good time to come when there are fewer crowds and snow is a rarity, but there really is no bad time to visit one of the worlds truly great cities.

Paris Tourist Office

Address: 25 rue des Pyramides, 75001 Paris

Email: info@paris-touristoffice.com

Phone: +33 (0) 8 92 68 30 00

  • Versailles Gardens
    The gardens of Versailles are a fantastic example of French formal gardening - controlling, harnessing and recreating nature - effected by a supremely confident King Louis XIV in the 17th century. These excessive, extravagant gardens dazzle visitors.
  • Saint-Ouen/Clignancourt Flea Market
    One of the world's finest flea markets, the Saint-Ouen "Puces" have a layout to rival the most tangled Oriental souk. Every weekend, the area around the Porte de Clignancourt becomes a throng of activity, selling everything from full-scale wooden fairground horses to vintage Pierre Cardin socks.
  • Cathédrale Notre Dame De Paris
    Almost 600 years after its completion, the Cathédrale Notre Dame de Paris continues to amaze and inspire the masses that flock there each year.
  • Arc de Triomphe
    Napoleon's grand symbol of military victory has ironically been used twice as a shaming ground for crushing French defeats: in 1871 by the Prussians and in 1914 by the Germans. Nonetheless, this grandiloquent marble arch proudly crowns the Champs-Elysees and sits on the city's most important axis, La Voie Triomphale.
  • Père Lachaise Cemetery
    The tombs of celebrated singers, writers, artists, statesmen and revolutionaries can be found among the thousands buried in the pleasantly sprawling, leafy Paris cemetery - Cimetière du Père Lachaise. A modern-day mecca, it is reputedly the world's most-visited cemetery, with tombs ranging from the ludicrous and ostentatious to the understatedly simple.
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