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  • HI I'M RICK STEVES BACK WITH

  • MORE OF THE BEST OF EUROPE.

  • THIS TIME, WE'RE EXPLORING THE WONDERS OF PARIS,

  • MAGNIFICENT AND, THANKS TO MONSIEUR EIFFEL, RIVETING.

  • TO ME PARIS IS THE CAPITAL

  • OF EUROPE.

  • IT'S THE CITY I CAN RETURN TO MORE THAN ANY OTHER,

  • WITH GRAND MONUMENTS THAT NEED NO INTRODUCTION,

  • AND IT HIDES A LIFETIME OF CULTURAL DELIGHTS.

  • EVERYTHING IN THIS EPISODE IS WITHIN EASY REACH

  • BY FOOT OR METRO.

  • WE'LL SEE SOME ICONS OF THIS GREAT CITY,

  • THE INDUSTRIAL-AGE IRON OF THE EIFFEL TOWER

  • AND THE MEDIEVAL STONEWORK OF NOTRE DAME.

  • THEN WE'LL SEE STARK REALISM AND DREAMY IMPRESSIONISM

  • IN THE ORSAY GALLERY.

  • ESCARGOT.

  • WE'LL JOIN A FRIEND DINING ON FRENCH FAVORITES.

  • SO YOU STAB IT?

  • YES.

  • AFTER LURKING WITH BONES IN THE CATACOMBS,

  • WE'LL SEE HOW THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

  • HELPED CREATE THIS GRAND CITY.

  • THE SEINE RIVER SPLITS THE CITY

  • INTO THE RIGHT BANK AND THE LEFT BANK.

  • ITS TWO ISLANDS MARK

  • THE CENTER OF THE OLD TOWN.

  • MOST OF THE ESSENTIAL SIGHTS

  • LIE NEAR THE NOTRE DAME,

  • BETWEEN THE EIFFEL TOWER,

  • THE LATIN QUARTER

  • AND MONTMARTRE,

  • THE CITY'S HIGHEST POINT.

  • THE EIFFEL TOWER WAS BUILT IN 1889 TO CELEBRATE

  • THE 100th ANNIVERSARY OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

  • AND TO SHOW OFF AT A WORLD'S FAIR.

  • IT WAS A MUSCULAR SYMBOL OF THE INDUSTRIAL AGE.

  • TO A GENERATION HOOKED ON TECHNOLOGY,

  • IT WAS THE MARVEL OF ITS DAY,

  • TRUMPETING PROGRESS AND MAN'S INGENUITY.

  • THIS 900-FOOT-TALL TOWER HAS THREE OBSERVATION LEVELS.

  • THE HIGHER YOU GO, THE MORE YOU PAY.

  • FOR ME, THE MIDDLE LEVEL IS PLENTY HIGH.

  • THOUSANDS OF IRON BARS AND MILLIONS OF RIVETS,

  • ALL ASSEMBLED IN JUST OVER TWO YEARS.

  • TODAY, IT STANDS TALL, AN EXCLAMATION POINT,

  • SYMBOLIZING THE PROUD, INDEPENDENT SPIRIT

  • OF THE FRENCH.

  • THE TROCADERO SQUARE, ACROSS THE RIVER,

  • IS THE PLACE TO VIEW THE TOWER

  • AND TO CHECK OUT A COLORFUL SCENE.

  • PARISIANS OWN THEIR CITY.

  • IN FACT, TWICE A WEEK STREETS ARE CLOSED

  • AND THOUSANDS TURN OUT TO ROLL THROUGH THEIR CITY

  • IN AN EXUBERANT CELEBRATION OF LIFE.

  • PARIS WAS BORN CENTURIES BEFORE CHRIST,

  • RIGHT HERE ON THE ILE de la CITE,

  • AN ISLAND IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SEINE RIVER.

  • THE ROMANS CONQUERED THE LOCAL FISHING TRIBE AND SET UP CAMP.

  • TODAY, THE NOTRE DAME CATHEDRAL MARKS THE PLACE

  • WHERE A ROMAN TEMPLE ONCE STOOD.

  • THE CITY'S FIRST BISHOP, ST. DENNIS,

  • HOLDS HIS HEAD IN HIS HANDS.

  • WHEN CHRISTIANITY BEGAN MAKING CONVERTS HERE,

  • THE PAGAN ROMANS BEHEADED HIM.

  • BUT, ACCORDING TO LEGEND, DENNIS JUST PICKED UP HIS HEAD

  • AND KEPT ON GOING.

  • INSPIRED BY THIS MIRACLE, CHRISTIANITY FLOURISHED

  • AND THE TEMPLE WAS REPLACED BY A CHURCH.

  • IMAGINE THE FAITH OF THE PEOPLE WHO BUILT THIS,

  • BREAKING GROUND IN 1163 ON A BUILDING

  • WHICH WOULDN'T BE FINISHED FOR 200 YEARS.

  • GOTHIC ARCHITECTS INCORPORATED THE LATEST TECHNOLOGY:

  • FLYING BUTTRESSES TO SUPPORT THE HEAVY ROOFTOP.

  • ITS GHOULISH GARGOYLES MULTI-TASK:

  • THEY SERVE AS FANCY RAINSPOUTS

  • AND SCARE AWAY THE EVIL SPIRITS.

  • THE CHURCH IS DEDICATED TO OUR LADY, OR NOTRE DAME.

  • MARY CRADLES THE BABY JESUS;

  • THE ROSE WINDOW PROVIDES A MAJESTIC HALO.

  • THE VIRGIN MARY WAS HIGHLY REVERED

  • THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE AGES.

  • THE FAITHFUL PETITIONED HER IN TIMES OF TROUBLE

  • FOR BOTH COMFORT AND, THROUGH HER INTERVENTION, GOD'S MERCY.

  • AS WORSHIPPERS HEADED FOR MASS,

  • THEY'D WALK UNDER A RELIEF OF JUDGMENT DAY.

  • CHRIST SITS ON HIS THRONE.

  • THE TRUMPET SOUNDS.

  • ALL ARE JUDGED:

  • PEASANTS, KNIGHTS, NOBLES, ROYALS, EVEN BISHOPS.

  • AN ANGEL WEIGHS CUTE LITTLE SOULS

  • WHILE CHEATING DEMONS YANK ON THE SCALES.

  • THE SAVED STAND HAPPILY AT CHRIST'S RIGHT HAND...

  • ...THE DAMNED, A SORRY CHAIN GANG, ARE ON HIS LEFT.

  • CARVINGS LIKE THAT,

  • AND LIKE THIS SCENE OF EVE TEMPTING ADAM WITH AN APPLE,

  • REMIND US THAT THIS ART WAS MORE THAN DECORATION.

  • THESE IMAGES REINFORCED

  • THE STORIES PEOPLE LEARNED IN CHURCH.

  • WHILE THE CHURCH IS DEDICATED TO MARY,

  • THE REST OF PARIS SEEMS DEDICATED TO REGULAR PARISIANS.

  • THE OLD CENTER, WITH ITS TWO ISLANDS

  • IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SEINE, RETAINS A CHARMING ELEGANCE.

  • THE ILE de la CITE IS LADEN WITH HISTORIC SIGHTS.

  • BUT THE LITTLE ILE ST. LOUIS,

  • CONNECTED BY A PEDESTRIAN BRIDGE,

  • IS LADEN ONLY WITH THE DELIGHTS OF GOOD LIVING.

  • ARNAUD.

  • OH, RICK.

  • ça va.

  • ça va bien.

  • I'M RENDEZVOUSING WITH MY PARISIAN FRIEND

  • AND FELLOW TOUR GUIDE, ARNAUD SERVIGNAT.

  • GREAT ISLAND.

  • YEAH, THIS IS ILE ST. LOUIS, RICK.

  • I LOVE THIS PLACE.

  • YOU KNOW, ALL AROUND IN THIS REALLY UNIFORM ARCHITECTURE,

  • EVERYTHING DATING FROM THE 17th CENTURY,

  • AND THE BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS --

  • VERY EXPENSIVE, THE MOST EXPENSIVE IN TOWN --

  • AND I WISH I COULD HAVE AN APARTMENT HERE,

  • IF I COULD AFFORD IT.

  • THIS IS VERY TRENDY TO LIVE HERE?

  • OH, MY GOD, WONDERFUL.

  • AND ALL ALONG THE STREETS YOU'VE GOT SOME GALLERIES,

  • QUAINT LITTLE BOUTIQUES AND RESTAURANTS,

  • AND JUST DOWN THE STREET THERE IS A PLACE, BERTHILLON,

  • WHERE YOU HAVE THE BEST SORBETS IN PARIS.

  • REALLY?

  • YEAH.

  • YES, THE ISLAND IS CHARMING,

  • BUT THE WHOLE CITY OF PARIS IS CHARMING.

  • IN FACT, IT FACES THE RIVER SEINE,

  • AND THE RIVER SEINE HAS BEEN CALLED BY PARISIANS,

  • "THE MIRROR OF THE CITY."

  • IT'S A GREAT PEOPLE ZONE.

  • YEAH, YOU KNOW, PEOPLE STROLLING.

  • YEAH.

  • WANDERING AROUND.

  • FESTIVALS HERE?

  • YES, INDEED.

  • ON THE BASTILLE DAY WE HAVE A BIG PARTY HERE,

  • BIG DANCING ORGANIZED.

  • DANCING.

  • DANCING ALL AROUND THE PLACE.

  • AND TODAY IT'S JUST SO RELAXED.

  • SO WHAT IS THE FRENCH WORD FOR THESE LITTLE STALLS?

  • Bouquinistes, WE CALL THEM.

  • IT COMES FROM THE NAME bouquin, WHICH IS OLD FRENCH.

  • OKAY, SO OLD BOOKS IN OLD FRENCH.

  • OLD BOOKS, YES.

  • AND THEY SELL PRINTS, YOU KNOW.

  • AND IT GOES BACK A LONG TIME?

  • OH, BACK TO THE 1600s, YES, INDEED.

  • THERE WERE, YOU KNOW, VERY WILD VENDORS

  • WHICH WERE ALL ALONG THE RIVER SEINE LIKE THAT.

  • AND THEY HAD TO BE REGULATED IN THE 19th CENTURY

  • BECAUSE THEY WERE SO WILD.

  • IT'S JUST A CLASSIC PARISIAN SCENE.

  • IT HAS, YOU KNOW, KIND OF A BOHEMIAN LIFE-STYLE.

  • I'M TAKING ARNAUD TO LUNCH.

  • AGAINST HIS ADVICE,

  • I'M EATING ALL THE PARISIAN CUISINE CLICHéS IN ONE MEAL.

  • THIS IS A kir, YOU KNOW, A GOOD CIVILIZED WAY TO START A MEAL.

  • SO IT'S AN APERITIF?

  • MM-HMM.

  • TELL ME ABOUT THE APERITIF.

  • APERITIF IS TO OPEN YOUR APPETITE.

  • ESCARGOT.

  • ESCARGOT.

  • OH, RICK, LOOK AT THAT.

  • IT LOOKS NICE.

  • Merci.

  • Soupe al'Oignon.

  • SO THIS IS THE FIRST COURSE?

  • YES, THIS IS THE ENTRéE.

  • AND ACTUALLY, YOU GUYS CALL THE ENTRéE THE MAIN COURSE,

  • WHEN THE ENTRéE IS THE STARTER IN FRANCE.

  • THAT MAKES SENSE, ACTUALLY.

  • OKAY, I HAVE MY ESCARGOT.

  • AND I JUST USE THIS?

  • Alors, YES.

  • SO YOU STAB IT?

  • YES.

  • THEN YOU TWIST IT OUT.

  • IT COMES OUT EVENTUALLY.

  • VERY CHEWY, YOU WILL SEE.

  • OH, THAT'S GOOD.

  • GOOD, HUH?

  • GARLIC, PARSLEY.

  • A LOT OF TOURISTS DON'T WANT THE ESCARGOT, BUT I LOVE IT.

  • WHAT IS THE HISTORY OF THE ONION SOUP?

  • AH, THE ONION SOUP IS SOMETHING YOU EAT MORE IN THE WINTERTIME

  • BECAUSE, YOU KNOW, IT WAS TO WARM UP THE EMPLOYEES

  • OF THE CENTRAL MARKET DURING THE NIGHTTIME.

  • I EAT ONION SOUP ALL YEAR.

  • I KNOW, YOU GUYS, AMERICANS, ARE EATING EVERYTHING

  • ALL YEAR ROUND.

  • [ laughter ]

  • Merci, I THINK.

  • THIS IS ACTUALLY THE MAIN COURSE,

  • plate principal IN FRENCH.

  • Plate principal.

  • Plate principal.

  • OKAY, THE PRINCIPAL PLATE.

  • ABSOLUTELY, YES.

  • OKAY, STEAK TARTARE.

  • STEAK TARTARE, YES.

  • VERY FAMOUS.

  • DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS MADE OF?

  • NO.

  • IT'S FRESH RAW BEEF.

  • THIS IS RAW BEEF?

  • RAW BEEF.

  • VERY FRESH.

  • THE SPICE COMES FROM THE WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE,

  • THE KETCHUP, THE MUSTARD, THE TABASCO, SALT, PEPPER

  • AND THE YOLK OF AN EGG,

  • AND THEN YOU JUST MIX IT ALL TOGETHER WITH THE BEEF.

  • DO YOU LIKE IT?

  • YES, I LOVE IT.

  • YOU'VE INTRODUCED ME TO SOMETHING NEW.

  • THIS ONE IS SO GOOD.

  • I CAN'T BELIEVE IT.

  • I'M EATING RAW BEEF AND IT TASTES GOOD.

  • IT IS GOOD, HUH?

  • WOW!

  • ESPECIALLY WITH SOME RED WINE.

  • M-HMM.

  • SO WE ARE, YOU KNOW, HAVING NOW THE CHEESE COURSE,

  • WHICH IS VERY IMPORTANT.

  • YOU DON'T END UP A MEAL WITHOUT SOME CHEESE.

  • AND BASICALLY, YOU KNOW, YOU ORDER CHEESE TO FINISH THE WINE,

  • AND THEN YOU ORDER MORE WINE TO FINISH THE CHEESE.

  • IT'S A NICE CYCLE.

  • OH, IT'S A VICIOUS CIRCLE.

  • A VICIOUS CYCLE.

  • AH, THIS IS DESSERT TIME, RICK.

  • YOU'RE HAVING crème brûlée,

  • AND I HAVE CHOCOLATE.

  • THIS IS SACRED, YOU KNOW, FOR LUNCHTIME

  • TO STOP AT LEAST AN HOUR.

  • WE DON'T WORK.

  • LOOK AT THESE PEOPLE; THEY'VE BEEN HERE FOREVER.

  • YES, IT'S SACRED.

  • ENJOY.

  • OKAY.

  • SO THE COFFEE ALWAYS COMES AFTER ALL OF THE FOOD?

  • AFTER THE DESSERT, ALWAYS.

  • WHAT IF YOU ASK FOR YOUR COFFEE WITH THE MEAL?

  • THEY WOULD SAY, "YES, SURE,"

  • BUT IT WOULD COME AFTER THE MEAL.

  • THEY DON'T WANT TO BE RUDE.

  • OKAY.

  • WHAT A MEAL.

  • EXCELLENT, WASN'T IT?

  • I'M HEADING FOR THE ORSAY GALLERY.

  • OH, GO AHEAD.

  • I'M FINISHING MY COGNAC.

  • AU REVOIR.

  • BYE-BYE, RICK.

  • GETTING AROUND PARIS IS EASY ON THE METRO.

  • THE ORIGINAL STATIONS WERE ART NOUVEAU.

  • THIS NEW ONE CELEBRATES THE SYSTEM'S 100th BIRTHDAY.

  • AND THE LATEST GENERATION SHOWS EUROPE'S COMMITMENT

  • TO EVER-MORE-EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSIT.

  • THE TRAIN IS COMPLETELY AUTOMATED,

  • ALLOWING PASSENGERS TO WATCH THE TUNNEL COMING AT THEM.

  • FASTER THAN A TAXI CAN TAKE US,

  • WE HURTLE BENEATH THE CITY TO OUR NEXT STOP.

  • THE ORSAY GALLERY, FAMOUS FOR ITS MUCH-LOVED COLLECTION

  • OF IMPRESSIONIST MASTERPIECES, FILLS AN OLD TRAIN STATION.

  • THE BUILDING ITSELF IS MAGNIFICENT.

  • TRAIN TRACKS USED TO GO RIGHT DOWN THE MIDDLE.

  • THE ART OF THE ORSAY TAKES YOU FROM 1848 TO 1914.

  • THIS IS THE TIME WHEN THE OLD WORLD MEETS THE MODERN WORLD.

  • IT'S CONSERVATIVE AND REVOLUTIONARY, SIDE BY SIDE.

  • BEFORE THE IMPRESSIONISTS,

  • 19th-CENTURY ARTISTS PAINTED IDEALIZED BEAUTY.

  • THIS WAS CONSERVATIVE ART,

  • POPULAR THROUGHOUT THE 1800s BECAUSE IT WAS...

  • SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL.

  • CABANEL'S BIRTH OF VENUS IS THE QUINTESSENCE OF BEAUTY.

  • THE LOVE QUEEN RECLINES SEDUCTIVELY,

  • JUST BORN FROM THE FOAM OF A WAVE.

  • AT THE TIME, SEX WAS CONSIDERED DIRTY

  • AND COULD BE EXALTED ONLY IN A MORE PURE AND DIVINE FORM.

  • BUT WHILE MAINSTREAM ARTISTS CRANKED OUT

  • THESE IDEAL BEAUTIES, A REVOLUTIONARY NEW BREED

  • OF ARTIST WAS PAINTING A HARSHER REALITY.

  • CROSS THE TRACKS AND YOU FIND THE REALISTS.

  • IN THE PAINTER'S STUDIO, GUSTAVE COURBET TAKES US

  • BEHIND THE SCENE AT THE PAINTING OF A GODDESS.

  • THE MODEL, NOT A GODDESS BUT A REAL WOMAN,

  • TAKES A BREAK FROM POSING TO WATCH COURBET AT WORK.

  • ORDINARY PEOPLE MILL ABOUT.

  • THE LITTLE BOY SEEMS TO ADMIRE THE ARTIST,

  • ALREADY NOTORIOUS FOR HIS NONCONFORMITY.

  • NO ONE WOULD SHOW COURBET'S WORK,

  • SO HE PUT ON HIS OWN ART SHOW.

  • HE BUILT A LITTLE SHACK IN THE CENTER OF TOWN

  • AND HUNG HIS PAINTINGS, BASICALLY THUMBING HIS NOSE

  • AT THE SHOCKED PUBLIC AND HIS CONSVATIVE CRITICS.

  • EDOUARD MANET RUBBED REALISM IN THE PUBLIC'S FACE,

  • AND THEY HATED IT.

  • MANET'S NUDE DOESN'T GLOSS OVER ANYTHING.

  • THE POSE IS CLASSIC, BUT THE SHARP OUTLINES AND HARSH COLORS

  • ARE NEW AND SHOCKING.

  • HER HAND IS A CLAMP;

  • HER STARE, DEFIANT.

  • IGNORING THE FLOWERS HER SERVANT BRINGS

  • FROM HER LAST CUSTOMER,

  • THIS PROSTITUTE LOOKS OUT AS IF TO SAY,

  • "NEXT."

  • IT'S AROUND 1880, AND MANET AND HIS RAT PACK

  • OF CONSERVATIVELY DRESSED RADICALS GATHERED IN PARIS,

  • PUSHING THE CREATIVE ENVELOPE.

  • IT'S TIME FOR THE REVOLUTION OF IMPRESSIONISM TO BEGIN.

  • IMPRESSIONISM INITIATED THE GREATEST CHANGE IN ART

  • SINCE THE RENAISSANCE.

  • NOW, ARTISTS WERE FREE TO DELVE INTO THE WORLD

  • OF COLORS, LIGHT AND FLEETING IMPRESSIONS.

  • THEY FEATURED EASYGOING, OPEN-AIR SCENES,

  • CANDID SPONTANEITY AND, ALWAYS, THE PLAY OF LIGHT.

  • IMPRESSIONISTS MADE THEIR CANVASES SHIMMER

  • BY AN INNOVATIVE TECHNIQUE.

  • RATHER THAN MIXING COLORS TOGETHER ON A PALATE,

  • THEY APPLIED THE COLORS IN DABS SIDE BY SIDE ON THE CANVAS

  • AND LET THESE MIX AS THEY TRAVELED TO YOUR EYE.

  • UP CLOSE, IT DOESN'T WORK;

  • BUT MOVE BACK, AND voilà!

  • CLAUDE MONET IS CALLED "THE FATHER OF IMPRESSIONISM."

  • FOR HIM, THE PHYSICAL SUBJECT WAS NOW ONLY THE RACK

  • UPON WHICH TO HANG THE LIGHT, SHADOWS AND COLORS.

  • AUST RENOIR CAUGHT PARISIANS LIVING AND LOVING

  • IN THE AFTERNOON SUN.

  • DAPPLED LIGHT WAS HIS SPECIALTY.

  • IN THIS PAINTING, YOU CAN ALMOST FEEL THE SUN'S WARMTH

  • AND SMELL THE POWDER ON THE WOMEN'S FACES.

  • EVEN THE SHADOWS ARE CAUGHT UP IN THE MOOD.

  • EVERYTHING'S DANCING.

  • RENOIR PAINTS A WALTZING BLUR TO CAPTURE,

  • NOT THE PHYSICAL DETAILS, BUT THE INTANGIBLE CHARM

  • OF A RESTAURANT ON PARIS'S MONTMARTRE.

  • MONTMARTRE, A PARISIAN HILL CROWNED

  • BY THE DRAMATIC NEO-BYZANTINE SACRE COEUR CHURCH,

  • WAS FAMOUS FOR THE AMBIANCE CAPTURED BY THE IMPRESSIONISTS.

  • A BLOCK AWAY, THE PLACE du TERTRE IS JUMBLED

  • WITH ARTISTS...AND TOURISTS.

  • IF YOU REALLY TRY, YOU CAN ALMOST IMAGINE

  • RENOIR, VAN GOGH AND PICASSO, WHO CAME HERE A CENTURY AGO,

  • POOR, CAREFREE AND SEEKING INSPIRATION.

  • BACK THEN, LIFE HERE ON MONTMARTRE

  • WAS A WORKING-CLASS COMMOTION

  • OF CAFES, BISTROS AND DANCE HALLS.

  • PAINTERS CAME HERE FOR THE LOW RENT AND READY joie de vivre.

  • TO GETWAY FROM ALL THE TOURISTS,

  • SIMPLY WALK THE BACK STREETS,

  • WHERE A BIT OF MONTMARTRE'S VILLAGE CHARM SURVIVES.

  • AH, THE STEPS OF SACRE COEUR.

  • THIS IS A PLACE WHERE LOCALS AND TRAVELERS ALIKE

  • CONGREGATE TO MARVEL AT PARIS, OR EACH OTHER.

  • FROM HERE, THE "CITY OF LIGHT" FANS OUT AT YOUR FEET.

  • YOUR PARISIAN EXPERIENCE IS A BLEND OF GREAT MUSEUMS,

  • FINE FOOD AND CHARACTERISTIC NEIGHBORHOODS.

  • THE LATIN QUARTER IS THE CORE OF THE LEFT BANK,

  • AS THE SOUTH SIDE OF THE SEINE RIVER IS KNOWN.

  • THIS HAS LONG BEEN THE CITY'S UNIVERSITY DISTRICT.

  • IN FACT, THE UNIVERSITY OF PARIS,

  • A LEADING UNIVERSITY IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE,

  • WAS FOUNDED HERE IN THE 13th CENTURY.

  • BACK THEN, THE VERNACULAR LANGUAGES,

  • LIKE FRENCH AND GERMAN, WERE CRUDE,

  • GOOD ENOUGH TO HANDLE YOUR BASIC NEEDS.

  • BUT FOR HIGHER LEARNING, ACADEMICS, LIKE THIS GUY,

  • SPOKE AND CORRESPONDED IN LATIN.

  • UNTIL THE 1800s, FROM SICILY TO SWEDEN,

  • LATIN WAS THE LANGUAGE OF EUROPE'S EDUCATED ELITE.

  • AND PARISIANS CALLED THIS UNIVERSITY DISTRICT

  • "THE LATIN QUARTER" BECAUSE THAT'S THE LANGUAGE THEY HEARD

  • ON THE STREETS.

  • TODAY, ANY REMNANT OF THAT LATIN IS BURIED

  • BY A TOURISTY TABOULI OF ETHNIC RESTAURANTS.

  • STILL, IT REMAINS A GREAT PLACE TO GET A FEEL

  • FOR THE TANGLED CITY, BEFORE THE NARROW LANES

  • WERE REPLACED BY WIDE, MODERN BOULEVARDS IN THE 19th CENTURY.

  • THE SCHOLARLY AND ARTSY PEOPLE OF THIS QUARTER

  • BREWED UP A NEW RAGE, PARIS'S CAFE SCENE.

  • BY THE TIME OF THE REVOLUTION, THE CITY'S COUNTLESS CAFES

  • WERE THE HAUNT OF POLITICIANS AND PHILOSOPHERS,

  • WHO PLOTTED A BETTER FUTURE AS THEY SIPPED THEIR COFFEE.

  • AND THE CAFE SOCIETY REALLY TOOK OFF IN THE EARLY 1900s

  • AS THE WORLD'S LITERARY AND ARTISTIC AVANT-GARDE

  • CONVERGED ON PARIS.

  • IN NOW-FAMOUS CAFES ALONG BOULEVARD ST.GERMAIN

  • AND BOULEVARD ST. MICHEL, FREE THINKERS LIKE HEMMINGWAY,

  • LENIN AND JEAN PAUL SARTRE ENJOYED THE CREATIVE FREEDOM

  • THESE HANGOUTS ENGENDERED.

  • WITH ITS CAFE AND UNIVERSITY SCENE,

  • PARIS HAD LONG BEEN A LAUNCH PAD FOR BOLD NEW IDEAS.

  • IN THE 18th CENTURY, GROUND-BREAKING POLITICAL

  • AND SOCIAL THINKING BY FRENCH PHILOSOPHERS

  • LIKE VOLTAIRE AND ROUSSEAU USHERED IN

  • "THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT."

  • LATER, THIS ENLIGHTENMENT PROVIDED THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

  • WITH A PHILOSOPHICAL BASIS,

  • AND IT GAVE THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION

  • MANY OF ITS BASIC PRINCIPLES.

  • PARIS HONORS ITS INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL HEROES

  • WITH TOMBS AND MEMORIALS IN ITS NEO-CLASSICAL PANTHEON.

  • IT LOOKS LIKE AN ANCIENT TEMPLE,

  • BUT IT'S ONLY ABOUT 250 YEARS OLD,

  • FROM THE TIME OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT.

  • DURING THE ENLIGHTENMENT

  • AND THE AGE OF REVOLUTION WHICH FOLLOWED,

  • EVERYTHING WAS SUBJECTED TO WHAT WAS CALLED

  • "THE TEST OF REASON."

  • IF IT WASN'T LOGICAL, IT WAS TOSSED OUT.

  • NOTHING WAS SACRED.

  • THE VERY NOTION OF ROYALTY WAS CHALLENGED

  • AND CHURCHES WERE TURNED INTO TEMPLES OF REASON.

  • EVEN THE USE OF CITY LAND FOR CEMETERIES, AS YOU LEARN

  • AT THE CATACOMBS OF PARIS, WAS REJECTED.

  • THE SIGN READS, "HALT! THIS IS THE EMPIRE OF DEATH."

  • IT KICKS OFF A ONE-MILE HIKE YOU WON'T SOON FORGET.

  • THE ANONYMOUS BONES OF SIX MILLION PERMANENT PARISIANS

  • LINE FORMER LIMESTONE QUARRIES DEEP UNDER THE STREETS.

  • IN 1785, PARIS DECIDED TO MAKE ITS CONGESTED CITY

  • MORE SPACIOUS AND SANITARY BY EMPTYING THE CEMETERIES,

  • WHICH TRADITIONALLY SURROUNDED CHURCHES,

  • INTO THIS LABYRINTHINE OSSUARY.

  • FOR DECADES, PRIESTS LED CEREMONIAL PROCESSIONS

  • OF BLACK-VEILED, BONE-LADEN CARTS INTO THE QUARRIES,

  • WHERE THE BONES WERE CAREFULLY AND ARTISTICALLY STACKED

  • AS MUCH AS 80 FEET DEEP.

  • EACH TRANSFER WAS FINISHED WITH A PLAQUE IDENTIFYING

  • FROM WHICH CHURCH THE BONES CAME

  • AND THE DATE THEY ARRIVED.

  • WHILE THERE IS HISTORY IN DEM BONES, THE CARNAVALET MUSEUM,

  • FILLING A LAVISH OLD ARISTOCRATIC MANSION,

  • IS THE BEST PLACE TO SORT THROUGH THE STORY OF PARIS.

  • PRE-REVOLUTIONARY FRANCE HAD A GOVERNMENT

  • BY, FOR AND OF THE WEALTHY.

  • AND AS THE RICH GOT RICHER AND RICHER,

  • PEOPLE WHO LIVED IN FABULOUS MANSIONS LIKE THIS

  • BECAME BLIND TO THE GROWING GAP BETWEEN THE HAVES AND HAVE-NOTS

  • IN THEIR COUNTRY.

  • LOUIS THE 14th, A.K.A. "THE SUN KING," WAS THE ULTIMATE KING

  • BACK WHEN PEOPLE ACCEPTED THE NOTION

  • THAT A FEW WERE BORN TO RULE AND BE RICH

  • WHILE MOST WERE BORN TO BE RULED AND TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF.

  • ROOM AFTER ROOM SHOWS THE OPULENCE OF THE UPPER CLASSES

  • IN THE AGE LEADING UP TO THE REVOLUTION.

  • LOUIS THE 14th, WHO ENJOYED THE LUXURY BUT ANTICIPATED TROUBLE,

  • SAID, "Après moi, le deluge; AFTER ME, THE FLOOD."

  • THE HEART OF THE MUSEUM FEATURES THAT deluge,

  • WHICH HIT WHEN THIS MAN, LOUIS THE 16th, WAS KING.

  • THE FRENCH REVOLUTION WAS KICKED OFF

  • WITH THE STORMING OF THE BASTILLE PRISON.

  • SUPPORTING THE ANGRY MASSES,

  • THE LIBERAL WING OF THE GOVERNMENT

  • TOOK MATTERS INTO ITS OWN HANDS,

  • DECLARING IT WOULDN'T QUIT

  • UNTIL THE PEOPLE HAD A CONSTITUTION.

  • IT WAS Vive la Nation,

  • liberté, egalité, AND fraternité,

  • UNTIL THE PEOPLE LITERALLY BEHEADED THE KING AND QUEEN.

  • THE PLACE de la REVOLUTION, OR REVOLUTION SQUARE.

  • IT WAS HERE THAT THE NEWFANGLED GUILLOTINE,

  • CONSIDERED A HUMANE FORM OF EXECUTION IN ITS DAY,

  • WAS SET UP.

  • AND IT WAS HERE THAT MARIE ANTOINETTE, LOUIS THE 16th

  • AND OVER 2,000 OTHERS WERE MADE A FOOT SHORTER AT THE TOP.

  • ACCORDING TO THIS PAINTING,

  • IT TOOK THREE TO RUN THE GUILLOTINE:

  • ONE TO MANAGE THE BLADE,

  • ONE TO CATCH THE BLOOD

  • AND ONE TO HOLD THE HEAD --

  • IN THIS CASE, OF MARIE ANTOINETTE --

  • UP TO THE CROWD.

  • TODAY, PARIS'S VAST REVOLUTION SQUARE IS CALLED

  • PLACE de la CONCORDE, PLACE OF HARMONY.

  • THE GUILLOTINE IS LONG GONE

  • AND ITS CENTERPIECE IS AN EGYPTIAN OBELISK

  • THE KING AND QUEEN WERE BEHEADED

  • BY A STARK AND EGALITARIAN GOVERNMENT.

  • BUT THE FRENCH LOVE OF FINE LIVING COULDN'T BE KEPT DOWN.

  • THE 19th CENTURY WAS A BOOM TIME FOR PARIS.

  • THE ENTIRE CITY WAS BEAUTIFIED

  • WITH GRAND NEW BOULEVARDS AND FANCY ARCHITECTURE.

  • IT WAS AN EXUBERANT AGE OF MONEY.

  • IF YOU HAD IT, YOU FLAUNTED IT.

  • FROM THE PLACE de la CONCORDE, THE CHAMPS ELYSéES --

  • ONCE A ROYAL CARRIAGEWAY, NOW EUROPE'S GRANDEST BOULEVARD --

  • LEADS TO THE ARC de TRIOMPHE.

  • THE ARCH WAS DEDICATED TO THE VICTORY OF THE PEOPLE

  • AND THEIR REPUBLIC, THE TRIUMPH OF FRENCH NATIONALISM.

  • A GLIMPSE OF THE DECADENCE OF PARIS'S BEAUTIFUL AGE,

  • OR belle époque, IS ENJOYED ALONG THE CHAMPS ELYSéES.

  • PARIS'S OLD OPERA HOUSE,

  • THE GRAND PALACE OF THIS GILDED AGE, WAS FINISHED IN 1875.

  • THE REAL SHOW WAS BEFORE AND AFTER,

  • WHEN THE ELITE OF PARIS, OUT TO SEE AND BE SEEN,

  • STRUTTED THEIR ELEGANT STUFF IN THE EXTRAVAGANT LOBBIES.

  • THINK OF THE GRAND MARBLE STAIRWAY AS A THEATER ITSELF,

  • FILLED WITH PARIS'S BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE.

  • THE ACTUAL THEATER IS A PALACE OF PLUSH AND ORNATE SEATING.

  • ABOVE IT ALL, A DELIGHTFUL CEILING,

  • PAINTED BY MARC CHAGALL IN THE 1960s,

  • FROLICS AROUND AN EIGHT-TON CHANDELIER.

  • NEARBY, THE JACQUEMART-ANDRé MUSEUM

  • FILLS A 19th-CENTURY MANSION OFFERING THE PUBLIC

  • A RARE, ARISTOCRATIC OPEN HOUSE.

  • EDOUARD ANDRé AND HIS WIFE NELIE JACQUEMART

  • SPENT THEIR LIVES AND FORTUNE

  • DESIGNING, BUILDING AND DECORATING

  • THIS INCREDIBLE MANSION.

  • I'M ENJOYING A TOUR BY ONE OF THE MUSEUM'S FINE GUIDES,

  • CIARA.

  • BECAUSE, YOU KNOW, THEY HAD NO CHILDREN,

  • THEY HAD A LOT OF MONEY AND THEY USED TO TRAVEL A LOT,

  • AND THEN THEY'D BRING MANY SOUVENIRS.

  • SO THESE ARE SOUVENIRS?

  • EXACTLY.

  • WHAT'S THIS?

  • THAT'S THE MUSIC ROOM.

  • YOU CAN ALMOST IMAGINE THE CLATTER OF JEWELRY

  • MIXING WITH THE CHAMBER MUSIC

  • AS EDOUARD AND NELIE THREW A PARTY.

  • THIS IS THE ITALIAN ROOM.

  • EXACTLY, BECAUSE THEY TRAVELED IN ITALY.

  • THEY LOVED ITALIAN ART AND THEY BROUGHT PAINTINGS

  • OF BELLINI, BOTTICELLI, MANTEGNA, CARAVAGGIO.

  • AND TIEPOLO, WHOSE FRESCO GRACES THE MANSION'S LOBBY.

  • AND THIS IS THE BEDROOM.

  • SO THE MONSIEUR AND MADAME LIVED HERE?

  • YES, BUT THIS WAS THE ROOM OF MADAME, chambre OF MADAME.

  • SO THEY HAD TWO DIFFERENT BEDROOMS?

  • EXACTLY, THAT'S NELIE JACQUEMART.

  • AND THIS WAS EDOUARD'S BEDROOM,

  • COMPLETE WITH A DELUXE BATHROOM.

  • FOR MORE OF THE DECADENCE OF THAT AGE,

  • CHECK OUT THE RITZY SHOPS.

  • IT'S RITZY IN THE TRUE SENSE,

  • SINCE THEY CLUSTER AROUND THE ORIGINAL RITZ HOTEL.

  • ENJOY THE LUXURY OF THIS NEIGHBORHOOD

  • BY WINDOW SHOPPING, OR, AS THE FRENCH SAY,

  • faire duche-vitrines, WINDOW LOOKING.

  • ACTUALLY, TODAY'S PARIS THRIVES WITH ORDINARY PEOPLE.

  • THE GOOD LIFE FEELS ACCESSIBLE TO ALL,

  • AND IN THE SPIRIT OF FRANCE'S REVOLUTION,

  • THE GOVERNMENT TRULY SEEMS TO WORK FOR THE PEOPLE.

  • WHILE THE STUNNING GEORGE POMPIDOU CENTER

  • HOLDS ONE OF THE WORLD'S TOP MODERN ART COLLECTIONS,

  • MOST PARISIANS ARE HAPPY JUST TO HANG OUT IN FRONT.

  • AND APART FROM ALL ITS WORLD-CLASS ATTRACTIONS,

  • MILLIONS OF PEOPLE CALL THIS CITY SIMPLY HOME.

  • NEIGHBORHOODS ENJOY FIRST-CLASS PUBLIC TRANSIT,

  • AND IF A TRAIN LINE'S DECOMMISSIONED,

  • IT'S PUT TO GOOD USE WITH ITS ARCHES HOUSING COLORFUL SHOPS

  • AND THE ELEVATED TRACK MADE INTO A LONG, SKINNY PARK.

  • THE PROMENADE PLANTéE IS POPULAR

  • FOR JOGGING OR STROLLING

  • OR JUST A PEACEFUL BREAK FROM THE CITY.

  • THERE'S A TIME-HONORED FINESSE TO PARISIAN LIFE,

  • A COMFORTABLE RHYTHM WITH KISSES ON THE CHEEK,

  • NEIGHBORHOOD STREET MARKETS

  • AND FAMILIAR FACES AT THE CORNER CAFE.

  • WHETHER YOU VISIT FOR ITS BLOCKBUSTER MONUMENTS,

  • ITS CAPTIVATING HISTORY

  • OR THE SIMPLE DELIGHTS OF A CAFE,

  • PARIS JUST MIGHT STEAL YOUR HEART.

  • THANKS FOR JOINING US.

  • I'M RICK STEVES.

  • UNTIL NEXT TIME, KEEP ON TRAVELIN'.

  • AU REVOIR.

HI I'M RICK STEVES BACK WITH

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