Paris

Ah, Gay Paris, city of lights, city of love. Capital of fashion and food. Its name alone raises the spirits of luminaries from Rimbaud to Robespierre, from Picasso to the Scarlet Pimpernel. We associate it with the technicolour magic of Gigi and macaroons, with a dancing Gene Kelly singing Gershwin tunes, with the risqué can-can dance of the Moulin Rouge, with gastronomic indulgence and sumptuous shops, with champagne cocktails …  in short, with hedonism.

But Paris has a much darker side, having witnessed some of the bloodiest episodes of modern history from the Revolution through to the Occupation. It is also a city of contradictions and surprises: Paris is perceived to be small, but is in fact the most densely populated area in the western world outside Manhattan. It is known for being low-rise and yet contains what was the tallest building in the world for the first 30 years of the 20th century.

Paris began as the Roman settlement of Lutetia in around 50ad and by around 500ad had risen to be the capital of the Frankish empire.  After a lull in its influence the city again became the capital of France after the Hundred Years War, although the kings of France generally preferred to hold court away from the urban mob, first in the chateaux of the Loire valley and later at the famous Palace of Versailles.  And with good reason, as the 14 July 1789 saw the defining moment of the city’s history in the storming of the Bastille and the start of the Revolution.

After the chaos that ensued, the period of terror and the violence and glory of the Napoleonic period, Paris began to take the shape we are familiar with today under the auspices of Emperor Napoleon III and Baron Hausmann. Huge areas of medieval slums were cleared to make way for grand avenues and extravagant neo-classical monuments. If you have not already been to Paris to see them, you will have almost certainly seen them on the canvases of the Impressionists, who encapsulated the spirit of la belle-époque and its wonderfully sexy demi-monde. Even the Nazis succumbed to Paris’ charm. General Choltitz refused Hitler’s order to leave the city in ruins at the end of the Occupation in 1944, preserving it for posterity.

Today, Paris is a diverse and multi-faceted metropolis.  It revels in its place as a home to almost every significant artistic and intellectual movement that Europe has seen in modern times. But with such a privileged cultural position come problems of its own and socio-economic inequalities that have brought unrest in its place, from the student demonstrations in the 1960s, to the race-related riots of 2005. However, their unique variant of national pride resists the dilution of culture, so unlike England and America, Paris hasn’t yet been overtaken by global chains.

Paris is the city of the flâneur and its compact size is ideal for roaming. It’s just as important to while away the hours shopping or watching the world go by from a sun-soaked terrace with a café crème or aperitif, as it is to visit the Louvre.


Find a...