Thursday, June 30, 2011

île de la cité

the island in the centre of paris, surrounded by the river seine & belonging to neither the rive gauche or the rive droite = the  île de la cité. it's where the medieval city lutetia was centred, because it was protected on all sides by water. 
nowadays, it's home to the one & only notre dame de paris, the gothic-style 13th century cathedral (as if it needs any introduction..).
don't know how i managed it, but i was lucky enough to have a walk around inside with not many other people - so i could look past the tourist-ish-ness of the place and actually appreciate it's history. i'm trying to get to a bunch of these more famous spots before the summer really kicks in, because it will bring with it not so much as a wave, but a tsunami of tourists. let's just ignore the fact that i am one of them...

notre dame is free to enter, because technically it's still a place of worship. they had a choir singing those really haunting hymns that echo throughout the cathedral. sends shivers down my spine!
the 200 y/o stained-glass windows filter weak rays of sun down into the cathedral. the most impressive ones are huge spheres made up of 100's of panes of glass. 

apparently on the first sunday of every month you can climb up to the top of the cathedral and get some spectacular views, but despite living in montmartre and therefore at the top of 200 steps, my legs would probably turn to jelly 30 seconds into the climb... i'll stick to appreciating it from the ground. 

this is another one of those places i have already been to - but every visit is a completely different experience. last time i was here it was evening, icy cold & dark - so the cathedral had a completely different atmosphere. still just as creepily beautiful as ever, though. the only letdown about notre dame - there's no hunchbacks.




S.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

hôtel des invalides

so a bunch of these places i'm visiting i've actually already been to... but there's just something refreshing about visiting them again 'this time around'. my latest refreshed visit: hôtel des invalides
built in 1670 under the reign of louis XIV, it was built originally as a hospital for injured war soldiers - then became a 'hotel' of sorts for invalids ... = crippled soldiers.

it's a massive building, with the huge, paved cour d'honneur (court of honour) in the centre. lining the edges of the court (and all the walls, come to think of it) are hundreds of canons. i never realised there was such an art & science behind the design of a canon...every single one is different, i swear!
another thing that this place has a tonne of: memorial plaques. the same words repeated over & over "MORT POUR LA FRANCE". not a huge fan of all this glorification of death, but hey - it lends a dramatic touch.

the outstanding feature of les invalides is def it's golden dome. depending on where you are in paris, there's a good chance that you'll be able to see it's golden spire reaching towards the sky. it's actually the dome of a church - the hôtel des invalides has two churches: the first, église saint-louis, for the invalids... then the église du dome, solely for the king's use. it is the bigger, more decadent latter that is home to the huge dome, naturally. this church is also home to the tomb of napolean bonaparte. 

coming back here again reminds me of being here between christmas & new years 2009, with my two french exchange sisters (fleur & iris) and jana ('the lil' german'). brought back so many memories! although last time it was in the dead of winter, brrrrrr. i've chucked in a photo of us here last time...




S.
napoléan
creepy headless baby with lonely, grasping hands...
the walls on the superior gallery are lined with memorial plaques
fancy cannons through the ages...
last year with my european sisters