Sunday, March 30, 2008

Right Bank of Seine River


The north side of the Seine is called the Right Bank because it lies on the right-hand side when one is facing downstream.

The following description of the Right Bank follows an east-west itinerary along the Seine starting across from the Île de la Cité and Île Saint-Louis.

It then loops back in a west-to-east direction along the major avenues that make up the Grands Boulevards and turns to points north and east.

North of Île Saint-Louis is the neighborhood of the Marais (“marsh”).

In the 13th century, this area was the home of the Knights Templar (see Military Religious Orders), who drained the marshy land for agricultural use.

The Marais is centered around the Place des Vosges (previously known as the Place Royale), the first public square constructed in Paris, in the early 17th century.

This area was the aristocratic neighborhood of Paris before the French Revolution, mainly between the second half of the 14th century, when the king moved his residence here, and the 17th century.

A number of 17th-century private townhouses (hôtels particuliers) stand in the Marais, many of which have been turned into museums or other cultural institutions.
The Marais is home to one of Paris’s larger Jewish neighborhoods, centered on the Rue des Rosiers, just west of the Place des Vosges.

Located directly north of the eastern tip of the Île de la Cité, Place de l’Hôtel de Ville is the site of the Parisian city hall.

Home to city authorities since the 13th century, the square was called Place de Grève until the end of the 19th century. It was the main place of public executions and Paris’s most famous criminals were put to death here.

West of the Hôtel de Ville is Place du Châtelet, named after the medieval prison and fortress that stood by the Seine until the early 19th century. I

n an effort to upgrade this hitherto run-down neighborhood, the ingenious city planner Baron Haussmann built two theaters here in the mid-19th century. These are now known as the Théâtre Musical de Paris and the Théâtre de la Ville.

Just north of the Hôtel de Ville is the Pompidou Center, also known as Beaubourg, an arts complex devoted to modern and contemporary art and design.

The structure, in steel and glass and featuring brightly colored, exposed pipes and ducts, is the work of Italian architect Renzo Piano and British architect Richard Rogers.

Its controversial pop-art design contrasts sharply with the overall gray hue of the city, and was criticized by many following the building’s inauguration in 1977.

Nevertheless, the complex, and its vibrant public square, frequented by street performers, soon became among the most popular landmarks in the city.

West of the Pompidou Center is Les Halles, the site of the central market of Paris from the 12th century until 1969.

The market was subsequently replaced by the Forum Les Halles, a multilevel underground complex featuring a shopping mall, museums, the Paris film library (vidéothèque), and a sports center.

The street level of Les Halles features a garden, the Jardin des Halles, surrounded by pedestrian-only thoroughfares.

The Châtelet-les Halles underground train station, connected to the Forum Les Halles, is a major transportation hub.

The Louvre, one of the largest and most famous museums in the world, is located southwest of Les Halles, on the Seine.

Construction of the current building began in 1546, on the site of a much smaller 13th-century fortress and palace.

The kings of France lived here intermittently from 1363 to 1682.

The structure became a public museum in 1793.

The Palace of the Tuileries, begun in 1564, stood to the west of what is now the Louvre until 1871, when it was burned by supporters of the Commune of Paris.

The Jardins des Tuileries, the original formal garden of the palace, is now a public park.

The Place de la Concorde, located on the west side of the Jardins des Tuileries, is the most spacious square in Paris. It was laid out in the mid-18th century by French architect Jacques Ange Gabriel as a monument to King Louis XV.

Originally called Place Louis XV, it was renamed Place de la Révolution during the French Revolution, when a guillotine was set up in the square for many of the subsequent public executions.

More than 1,000 people were executed here in the 1790s, notably King Louis XVI, Queen Marie-Antoinette, and revolutionary leaders Georges Jacques Danton and Maximilien de Robespierre.

The square received its current name after the revolution. Muhammad Ali, the viceroy of Egypt, gave the Luxor Obelisk that stands in the center of the square to Charles X in 1829.

It was erected in 1836. The obelisk, which originally stood in the ancient city of Thebes, dates from the 13th century bc, making it the oldest monument in Paris.

The Champs-Élysées (meaning “Elysian Fields”) is the most spectacular thoroughfare of Paris, running west from the Place de la Concorde to the Place Charles de Gaulle-Étoile (formerly called the Place de l’Étoile).

All major civic celebrations take place along this broad avenue, including the Bastille Day military parade on July 14.

Moving west from the Place de la Concorde, elegant gardens line the first few blocks of the Champs-Élysées.

The Grand Palais and the Petit Palais, both built for the 1900 Universal Exposition (World’s Fair), are located on the south side of the avenue. Both palaces now house art exhibitions.

North of the gardens lies the one-time aristocratic Faubourg Saint-Honoré neighborhood. Its most famous building is the Élysée Palace, the residence of the president of France.

At the center of Place Charles de Gaulle-Étoile, at the western end of the Champs-Élysées, stands the 50-m- (164-ft-) tall Arc de Triomphe.

Commissioned by French emperor Napoleon I in 1806 to commemorate his military victories, the monument was completed in 1835.

Beneath the arch is the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, in honor of French soldiers killed in World War I (1914-1918).

Twelve avenues radiate from the Place Charles de Gaulle-Étoile, giving it the appearance of a giant star (hence its original name, Place de l’Étoile). The layout is the masterpiece of 19th-century urban planner Baron Haussmann.

Southwest of the Arc de Triomphe is the Trocadéro, consisting of the semicircular Palais de Chaillot, built for the 1937 World’s Fair, and its gardens, called the Jardins du Trocadéro.

The Palais de Chaillot now houses the Musée de l’Homme (Museum of Man), the Musée de la Marine (Maritime Museum), the Théâtre National (National Theater), the Musée du Cinéma (Museum of Cinema), and the Cinemathèque Française, the French national film archives.

Also located in the vicinity are the Palais Galliera, which houses a museum of fashion, the Musée Guimet, featuring an Asian art collection, and the Musée d’Art Moderne (Museum of Modern Art).

The Grands Boulevards run in a huge semicircle from the Place de la Concorde northeast and then southeast to eastern Paris.

These once fashionable thoroughfares and promenades were laid out by Louis XIV in the 1670s to replace the old city walls.

North from the Place de la Concorde is the church of Sainte Marie Madeleine, commonly known as the Madeleine.

Emperor Napoleon I had the church built in the early 19th century in the style of a Greco-Roman temple.

Located to the northeast of the Madeleine is the Palais Garnier, better known as the Opéra, Paris’s main opera house until 1989.

The opera house was designed by French architect Charles Garnier and completed in 1875. The area around the Madeleine and the Opéra is a major commercial area, featuring some of the city’s best-known department stores, as well as many banks and travel agents.

The Grands Boulevards run east from the Place de l’Opéra through the Place de la République to the Place de la Bastille, southeast of the Marais.

The Bastille is a trendy neighborhood, with numerous art galleries, studios, and a busy nightlife.

The French Revolution erupted in this area when a mob stormed the Bastille fortress, which stood west of the Place de la Bastille, on July 14, 1789.

Across the square is the new Opéra de la Bastille, inaugurated on July 14, 1989, on the occasion of the bicentennial of the French Revolution.

Located on the northern edge of Paris, Montmartre is the highest hill in the city. This picturesque neighborhood is popular with tourists.

Countless artists lived in Montmartre in the early 20th century and the area prides itself as the birthplace of modern art.

The Basilica of Sacré Coeur, at the top of the hill, was built between 1875 and 1919.

The neighborhood of La Villette, on the northeastern edge of the city, is centered around the Parc de la Villette, which was built on the site of the city’s main slaughterhouse and livestock market.

The park is a major cultural and entertainment center, featuring a museum of science and industry as well as the Cité de Musique (City of Music), which houses the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique (National Higher Conservatory of Music), the Musée de Musique (Museum of Music), an Imax cinema, an exhibition hall, a pop and jazz music venue, and a theater.

In the southeast, the neighborhood of Bercy lies on the Seine. It is home to the French Ministry of Finance, a multipurpose sports facility called the Palais Omnisports, and the Parc de Bercy, built on the site of former wine warehouses.

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