Hotel week-end paris montmartre
Montmartre
in particular has been a favourite haunt of writers, painters
and other creative types for centuries. Situated to the north
of the city, secreted beneath the impressive, if not a little
pastiche, Sacre Coeur, Montmartre has managed to maintain its
quiet, rural origins.
The best time to explore Montmartre is in the early evening.
Take a leisurely stroll through its winding streets and enjoy
the pleasant abundance of restaurants and cafes, which litter
every pavement. Visit the Sacre Coeur around the same time and
you'll be treated to a fantastic view of Paris. You don't have
to pay for this pleasure either, something you'll appreciate once
you understand how expensive Paris can be.
The Sacré-Coeur Catholic basilica was built at the end of
the 19th century at the top of the Montmartre hill in Paris. Its
famous white pastry like architecture is dominating the city (look
at the picture below of Montmartre and the Sacré-Coeur taken
from the Pompidou center )
The Sacré-Coeur is a holy place and a flagship of Catholic
devotion to the Holy Virgin in Paris. It attracts many pilgrims
from all over the world and has a large network of affiliated
churches.
After
lunch you could take the metro down
into the Place du Tertre district of Paris, another post card
pretty area of Montmartre but also one of the most expensive.
The Sacre Coeur is the main landmark here as well as numerous
portrait artists harassing any and every passer by for a spot
of business. To avoid such nuisances try visiting early in the
morning when the streets are relatively clear, or early evening
when you can pay E2 to climb the Sacre Coeur tower. Standing roughly
at the same height as the Eiffel tower you'll be able to see almost
every major landmark, the Notre Dame Cathedral being the most
prominent directly in front.
for lovers of shopping :
With the exception of the paintings, portraits and other caricatures
of the Place du Tertre, which you will find at very interesting
prices, the 18th arrondissement does not offer any other special
shopping opportunities, apart from the small souvenir shops near
the Sacré Cœur. But it is worth discovering the atmosphere
of the food shops on Rue Lepic.
After this, avoid the overpriced restaurants and bars if you
can and instead head for the Montmartre cemetery which lies just
west of the butte at the beginning of Rue Caulaincourt and Place
de Clinchy. The cemetery is hidden beneath road level and boasts
such figures as Traffaut, Stendhol, Zola, Berlioz, Degas, Feydeau
and Offenbach. It really is a beautiful spot, the surrounding
gothic buildings and overgrown vegetation which cling to every
gravestone making you feel like you've stepped straight off the
street and into some sort of latter day Hammer horror movie.
The entrance to the cemetery can be found on Avenue Rachel Caulaincourt.
It is probably best to visit during the day if you're of a nervous
disposition. Continue past the cemetery and you'll come to a great
little burger bar, where you can order a wide variety of foods
from hot dogs to steaks. Two Asian brothers run the popular stall
and are always helpful with directions if you happen to find yourself
lost. You can watch them make your food as you wait and you won't
have to pay a fortune either once your meal is finished. It's
also a good spot to meet new people as the bar stands at the very
gateway to Pigalle, famous site of the Moulin Rouge.
This
is undoubtedly the most touristy and most picturesque part of
Paris. Indeed, the 18th arrondissement is best-known for Montmartre,
the well-known landmark famous for the artists and intellectuals
who met in the steep, cobbled streets of Montmartre between the
vines and the Sacré Cœur. The only remains of these roads
decorated with lilacs is the Place du Tertre at the top of the
hill, where painters still meet and portrait artists display their
talents for all to see. Don't be surprised by the somewhat strange
automata on the façades of the Sacré Cœur; they
too are street artists. But the 18th is not just Montmartre, it
is also, at the foot of Montmartre, the every changing Goutte
d'Or neighbourhood, a mixture of Asia, Africa and Europe, whose
name comes from the wine formerly produced there.
Routes for everyone:
for lovers of leisurely walks:
You will definitely like Montmartre. It is a village raised up
on high, with winding, cobbled streets, and little squares with
gardens, which have become petanque grounds, and the warm cafés,
former intellectual cafés where philosophers, writers and
other artists met to ponder over the Society of their time while
enjoying a drink. But it is also, from its summit, the most beautiful
panoramic view of the capital from the Sacré Cœur. This
building, built in 1914, constantly surrounded by all kinds of
artists and tourists from all over the world, overlooks, with
its Byzantine style, the whole city and the kitchengardens and
parks of the neighbourhood.
Next to it, you can stop at the Place du Tertre where nostalgia
for the bohemian life can be found in artists proving their talent
before your eyes, which is also their source of income. On going
back down to the Goutte d'or neighbourhood, you will pass in front
of what remains of the most famous vineyard of Paris. Montmartre
is both romantic and initiatory, and perfumed by lilacs.
for lovers of culture :
It is again in Montmartre that you will find the most beautiful
cultural treasures of the 18th arrondissement. You can, indeed,
discover the Montmartre - Dali space, which will tell you how
this famous painter was involved with the artists of his time.
You will also discover his first exhibition in Paris in 1929.
You will also be surprised to see the remains of the Gallo-Roman
period in the columns erected in the Eglise St Pierre de Montmartre,
one of the oldest and most charming of the capital, near to which
can be found the Calvaire cemetery dating from the Merovingian
period.
Finally, you mustn't miss the famous Sacré Cœur and its
superb Byzantine architecture, from which you can see the whole
of Paris.
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