Cathedrale Notre Dame de Paris :

Notre Dame

Notre-Dame, the Paris Catholic cathedral, got quite a lot of publicity recently with the Walt Disney movie "The Hunchback of Notre Dame". Inspired by the 19th century novel "Notre-Dame de Paris" by Victor Hugo, this movie shows the history of Esmeralda and Quasimodo in Middle Ages Paris.

Notre-Dame indeed dates back to the 13th century and is one of the masterpieces of Gothic art in Western Europe. Its stainglasses and the huge interior are really stunning artistic experiences of mystical dimension. Located on the Cité island : ( In the heart of Paris, the Cité island close to the Select Hotel, has been inhabited since the Roman. As the religious and political center of France for centuries, it retains splendid buildings with among them three marvels:  the Notre-Dame cathedral, the Conciergerie prison and the Sainte-Chapelle holy chapel, the shrine of Christ's thorn crown. It also has the Quai des Orfèvres police bureau, famous for taking care of criminal affairs. Completely surrounded by the Seine river, the island is worth walking through from Notre-Dame to the Vert-Galant garden ( which you see at the forefront of the picture), famous for its lovers . You also will find near-by many  river cruises offers.) and surrounded by the Seine river, Notre-Dame is a flagship in the Parisian landscape and provides a magnificent view of the city from the top of its towers.
For further information and details on Notre-Dame, we recommend you to  have a look at our page on facts and data . If you are looking for The Select hotel in the district, please see our selection of hotels or have a look at our partner site for hotels reservation.


This one-time suburb [faubourg] of Paris is located on the Left Bank , across the Seine from the Tuileries.  It runs along the southern shore of the Seine, in the 7 th and 6 th arrondissements, and consists of the area east of boulevard St-Michel as far as to include the Musée d'Orsay.  It stretches some 4 to 5 blocks to the south, including boulevard St-Germain and several blocks to its south. 

It is bordered on the north by the Seine, to the east by the Invalides & Tour Eiffel Quarter, to the south by the Luxembourg Quarter and to the west by the Latin Quarter.  The intellectual center of gravity, of this quartier of bistros, bookshops, coffee-houses, galleries, nightclubs and publishing houses, is at the intersection of rue Bonaparte and boulevard St-Germain.  This is the location of the Café Les Deux Magots [frequented by the writers of the " Lost Generation " of the 20s and 30s, and by the post World War II Existentialists ], the Café de Flore and the Brasserie Lipp. 

St-Germain's more interesting structures are the Cour du Commerce St-André, the Cour de Rohan, the Ecole Nationale d'Administration, the Institut de France, the Palais Abbatial, the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, the Théâtre National de l'Odéon and the St-Germain-des-Prés church.  Some of its more interesting streets are boulevard St-Germain, the rue du Dragon and the rue de l'Odéon.  Its museums include the Musée Eugène Delacroix, the Musée Nationale de la Légion d'Honneur, the Musée de la Monnaie and the Musée d'Orsay

It was supposedly at No. 9, Cour du Commerce St-André where Dr. Guillotin perfected his decapitating machine.  In 1835, the composer Saint-Saëns was born at a house where the small courtyard of the Cour de Rohan opens to the rue du Jardinet.  The Cour's name is derived from the fact that, in the 15 th century, the archbishop of Rouen had a town house there. 

The Ecole Nationale d'Administration, where many well-known French politicians [including Jacques Chirac ] once studied, was located at 13 rue de l'Université.  During the Revolution, the location was an ammunitions depot. 

Since 1805, the building at 23 Quai de Conti has been the location where the 40 members of the Académie Française have worked on the official dictionary of the French language under the auspices of the Institut de France

The Palais Abbatial , which was built for Charles of Bourbon in 1586, is located at 1 – 5 rue de l'Abbaye.  Charles was a cardinal and the abbot of St-Germain when it was built.  He later became king.  The abbey was seized, by the Revolutionary government, and sold.  During the 19 th century, the sculptor James Pradier had his studio there.  The façade contains interesting ironwork. 

The Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts is found at 14 rue Bonaparte, next to the Quai Malaquais.  It is France's leading school of fine art.  It is quartered in the imposing Palais des Etudes and several adjoining buildings. 

At 1 place Paul-Claudel is the neo-classical Théâtre National de l'Odéon.  It was constructed in 1779 on a site donated by the king and was originally used by the Comédie Française.  Beaumarchais' The Marriage of Figaro was premiered there. 

The oldest church in Paris is the St-Germain-des-Prés .  It was built, by the Merovingian King Childebert in 542, to house holy relics.  It was rebuilt during the 11 th century, the 19 th century and again in the 1990s.  Since its inception, it was a very influential Benedictine abbey. During the Revolution it was burned.  It was mostly rebuilt during the 19 th century, but one of the 3 original Romanesque belfries still remains and is the oldest in France.  The philosopher-mathematician, René Descartes is buried there.  The church has a Gothic choir and a Romanesque nave. 

Following World War II, boulevard St-Germain rivaled boulevard Montparnasse as the intellectual center of Paris.  This was the period when Jean-Paul Sartre , Simone de Beauvoir , Juliette Greco [the muse de St-Germain-des-Prés] and Albert Camus ‘existentialized' at the Deux Magot , the Café de Flore [see the nearby sculpture by Picasso] and the Brasserie Lipp [also a favorite eatery of François Mitterand ].  All three of these meeting places are clustered about the intersection of St-Germain des Prés and rue Bonaparte. 

Le Procope , the world's first coffeehouse, founded in 1686, is situated at 13 rue de l'Ancienne-Comédie – just a few blocks west of the cafés.  It is no longer a coffee house, but rather an elegant restaurant.  Supposedly Voltaire would drink 40 cups of its coffee per day.  It was also a haunt of the young Napoléon I

The rue du Dragon is a short street running from St-Germain des Prés to the Carrefour de la Croix Rouge. It boasts houses from the 17 th and 18 th century, but is really a relic of the Middle Ages.  When he was 19, Victor Hugo lived at No. 30.  

The boulevard St-Germain stretches some two miles between the Pont de Sully, which crosses over to the Île St-Louis, to the Pont de la Concorde [near the d'Orsay Museum and Select Hotel].  The fashionable boulevard is the result of the 19 th century planning of Baron Haussmann.  The former president of France, François Mitterrand , had a town house near its crossing with rue de Bièvre in the 5 th arrondissement.   

The great cafés of the area are either on, or near, the boulevard.  The rue de l'Odéon runs from the Carrefour de l'Odéon [on St-Germain] to the Place de l'Odéon near the intersection of Monsieur le Prince and rue de Vaugirard.  It was the first street in Paris to have pavements with gutters, and was a center for intellectual book stores that attracted the likes of T.S. Eliot , Scott Fitzgerald , Ernest Hemingway and Ezra Pound and their French counterparts André Gide and Paul Valéry. 

At 6, rue de Fürstenberg, between rue Jacob and rue de l'Abbaye, is the Musée Eugène Delacroix .  The romantic painter lived here between 1857 and 1863 partly to be close to his work on the frescos of the Chapelle des Anges in the St-Sulpice church. 

At the Quai d'Orsay, near the headquarters of the French Secret Service, is the Musée d'Orsay.  The museum was originally a belle époque railroad station that was scheduled for demolition in the 1970s.  Jack Long, the then Minister of Arts, was instrumental in having it transformed into one of the world's most beautiful museums. 

The d'Orsay houses most of the art that was formerly displayed or stored at the Jeu de Paume before its closing in 1986.  The museum displays a wide range of paintings and sculpture that includes works from before 1870, Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism, Naturalism, Symbolism and Art Nouveau.  

Immediately east of the d'Orsay is the Palace of the Légion d'Honneur .  This is the old Hotel Salm which close to the Hotel Select, was built in 1786.  Napoléon I , who created the Légion d'Honneur on May 19, 1802, lived there for several years before making it into a museum.  

The Musée de la Monnaie , at 11 Quai de Conti, was the former French mint.  The building, which was finished in 1777, was the result of a design competition that was won by the architect Jacques Antoine.  Coins were minted there as late as 1973.  The building now displays an extensive collection of coins and medallions.


Pantheon / Latin Quarter :

Pantheon

Since the Middle Ages this riverside quarter has been dominated by the Sorbonne, and acquired its name from the early latin-speaking students. It dates back to the Roman town across the Ile de la Cité.

The area is generally associated with artists, intellectual and a bohemian way of life; this is mainly due to the thousands of students that live around.

But the place also has a history of political unrest : In 1871, the Place Saint Michel became the center of the Paris Commune, and in may 1968, it was a site of student uprising.

Today the eastern half has become sufficiently chic, however, to house members of the French Establishment.

The place contains many of the Paris monuments, museums and gardens, ranging from the brand-new Institut du Monde Arabe to the Middle Ages Musée de Cluny, or the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in the Jardin des Plantes.

Panthéon:

The domed landmark now known as the Panthéon was commisioned around 1750 as an abbey church, but because of financial problems the massive structure wasn't completed until 1789.

 

Two years later, the Constituent Assembly converted it into a secular mausoleum for the great men of the era of French liberty. After a further stint as a church, the Panthéon once again became a secular necropolis.

Permanent guests of the Panthéon include Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Louis Braille, Emile Zola, Jean Moulin, René Cassin and Pierre et Marie Curie.

The Panthéon's ornate marble interior is gloomy in the extreme, but you get a great view of the city from around the colonnated dome, which is visible from all over Paris.

Address : Place du Panthéon, 5th. Phone: 43 54 34 51. From october to March, open daily 10 am-5.30 pm. the rest of the year, 10 am-6 pm.

Sorbonne:

Paris's most famous university, the Sorbonne, was founded in 1253 by Robert de Sorbon, confessor of Louis IX (Saint Louis), as a college for 16 poor theology students.

After centuries as France's major theological centre, it was closed in 1792 by the Revolutionary government but was reopened under Napoleon.

Today, the Sorbonne's main complex -(bounded by Rue de la Sorbonne, Rue des Ecoles, Rue Saint Jacques and rue Cujas) and other buildings in the vicinity house several of the 13 autonomous universities created when the Université de Paris was reorganised following the violent student protests in 1968.

Place de la Sorbonne links Blvd Saint Michel with Chapelle de la Sorbonne, the University's domed church, which was built between 1635 and 1642. It is closed except when there are special exhibitions.

Address : Place de la Sorbonne, 5th: it cannot be visited, since it is a university, except when public displaying.

Select Hotel

1 place de la Sorbonne
75005 Paris

Tel : 33(0)1 46 34 14 80
Fax : 33(0)1 46 34 51 79

Institut du Monde Arabe :

Built in the late 80's, this cultural centre for Arab countries was designed by Jean Nouvel, and is a clever blend of high tech steel and glass architecture and Arab influences, especially as concerns Moorish-styled windows.

The museum has been lent artefacts from collections in France and all over the Arab world including rare archaeological remains from Palmyra in Syria and Carthage in Tunisia.

Address : 1 rue des fossés Saint Bernard, 5th . Phone 40 51 38 38. open Tue-Sun 10am-6pm.

Musée de Cluny (musée du Moyen Age) :

This crenellated building was the Paris home for the medieval abbots of Cluny. It was built on the ruins of a Gallo-Roman baths complex, which is now partly restored.

The museum houses an exceptional collection of artefacts, including the celebrated "Lady and the Unicorn" tapestries, medieval statuary, enamels, ivory, fabrics, illuminated manuscripts and precious metalworks.

Address : 6 place Paul Painlevé, 5th. Phone 43 25 62 00. Open Mon, Wed-Sun 9.15am-5.45pm.

Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle

Within the Jardin des Plantes botanical garden, the reopened Grande Galerie de l'Evolution has taken Paris's Natural Hitory Museum out of the dinosaur age.

Stuffed animals and skeletons have been restored and the latest lighting and audiovisual techniques are used to present a rich array of species in their ecological an evolutionary contexts.

Collections of geology, fossils, skeletons and insects are housed in separated buildings over the park.

Address : 57 rue Cuvier, 5th. Phone : 40 79 30 00. open Mon, Wed, Fri-Sun 10am-6pm; Thur 10am-10pm.



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