Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Back In The Decade: France & Paris


The fourth blog where the second week of my trip to Europe headed to France and its wonderous capital Paris.

Day Eight: Switzerland To France & Paris (July 17, 2010)

Day eight of the trip started a little sadly as we prepared to leave the fabulous land of Switzerland. However, the French countryside is beautiful. One of the areas we passed was the Champagne region. Remember, if it doesn't come from here it is Sparkling Wine.

Saying goodbye to Switzerland...

...& hello to France

The French Countryside...

...a chateau...

& another.

French Churches

Summer sunflowers

Once in Paris we first went to the hotel (Pullman Paris Centre Bercy) before heading out. First was off to dinner at Les Noces de Jeannette. Here I had the French delicacy, Escargot...they were amazing. Then it was to BLANK to watching the evening lighting of the Eifel Tower. This is one of the most popular tourist destinations and the crowd showed this. Then the rest of the evening was an after-dark trip around Paris, proving it is the City of Lights.

Arrived in Paris

Our hotel the Pullman Paris Centre

Les Noces de Jeannette

Vendôme Column

Luxor Obelisk

Effie Tower...

...lighting at dusk

                                                                                                                                                                                  

Arc de Triomphe at night

At night...

...in Paris

Day Nine: Paris (July 18, 2010)

Our full day in Paris would be a busy one. We started out with a trip down the Champs-Élysées and a stop at the Arc de Triomphe. Commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte it was built in the style of Roman Triumphant arches, except bigger. It was completed in the 1830s. 

The Seine

Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris

The Palais Garnie


Luxor Obelisk

Champs Élysées


Arc de Triomphe



Next stop the iconic Effiel Tower. Built-in 1889  We saw it lit up the evening before but now was time to go up into the 1,063-foot tower. I would like to say I went to the top, but alas no. The reason because of the small elevator going up from the middle observation area, the line was loooong. The view from the middle deck was still spectacular!

The Eiffel Tower

Looking Northwest towards Jardins du Trocadéro


Clockwise Left: Arc de Triomphe, Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris, Sacré Coeur Basilica, & Les Invalides 


Champ de Mars

Looking up the Iron Lady


For our next destination, we had a choice between the Palace of Versailles or the Louvre...so we choose the former.  There were a lot of great things to see, but the most famous is the painting by Leonardo da Vinci, the Mona Lisa

The Louvre

The Pyramid

Inside the Louvre

Ceiling painting

The most famous painting in the world...

...the Mona Lisa


 




Paintings of Louis XIV

The Imperial Crows of Napolean (L) & Joséphine (R)

The Coronation of Napoleon by Jacques-Louis David



Portrait de Jeanne d'Aragon & Death of Cleopatra



                                                
     

Venus de Milo

Roman Emperors





The Great Sphinx of Tanis


Sarcophagus

Sarcophagus of Pharaoh Sekhemre-Wepmaat


Processional Way of Sphinxes

Colossal statue of Ramesses II

It was here that I decided to make a detour to the Les Invalides which contains the Tomb of Napoleon Bonaparte. Let me say it isn't a short detour (about three miles), but since I am a historian and I don't know if I would get back to Paris I decided to just go...I am glad I did. Once back I knocked one more food item off my bucket list, foigra.
Anyway, that concluded our time in Paris. Let me say that I didn't find Parisians rude and Paris is a wonderful city. It is what Rome once was before the Christians dismantled it. If there is ever a world capital, it should be Paris...

Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel


George Washington


Les Invalides
                  
North Portal

Canons


Renault FT

Tomb of Napoleon Bonaparte

Above the Sarcophagus



Bas-Reliefs of Napoleon

The General & Emperor

Tombs of Napoleon II & Jospeh Napoleon

De La Fosse's Allegories Under the Dome Over the Tomb of Napoleon









No comments:

Post a Comment