Degas Paris Walks: St-Germain & Invalides (revised, Jan 06)
Start at MO: La Tour Maubourg, Vennes, or Invalides
HOTEL INVALIDES - GOLDEN DOME (1706)
Napoleon's Tomb, Army Museum and Order of the Liberation Museum
www.paris-views.com/html/...,1891,3340
www.paris-views.com/html/...,1891,3340
MUSEE RODIN & GARDEN: 77 rue de Varenne
Note: When in the garden - "line up" the Thinker, Napoleon's Gold Dome and the Tour Eiffel. Sit in the lovely, peaceful garden.
www.musee-rodin.fr/welcome.htm
WWW.LAMEDON.DE/URLAUB/PARIS/PB-P54C.JPG
SAINT-CLOTILDE, 23 bis rue Las Cases, very near the Rodin, metro Solferino. Once the most fashionable church in 19c Paris, the neo-Gothic Basilique Ste-Clotilde is best known for its imposing twin spires.
www.sacred-destinations.c...otilde.htm
HOTEL DE MATIGNON: 57 rue de Verenne
Beautiful building & Garden where Talleyrand once lived.
www.interet-general.info/...ignon1.jpg
LE MUSÉE MAILLOL: 61 rue de Grenelle.
Closed Tues. 11Am to 6Pm. Collection is housed in a beautiful 18C mansion famous for fountain and significant works by others: Cézanne, Degas, Gauguin, Matisse, Picasso and Renoir.
www.museemaillol.com/index2.html
THE CHAPEL OF OUR LADY OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL: 140 Rue du Bac
www.chapellenotredamedelamedaillemiraculeuse.com/EN/a.asp
AU BON MARCHE DEPARTMENT STORE. 24 rue de Sevres. MO: Sevres-Babylone.
Founded in 1852, the world's first department store covers 32,000 sq meters on 5 levels.Large grocery store called "la Grande Epicerie."
travel.discovery.com/dest...352_1.html
Explore shops on Rue de Servres/Rue du Four towards St-Sulpice and adjacent Rues: du Dragon, Cherche Midi, and Bonaparte
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 17th and 18th century, but is really a relic of the Middle Ages. When he was 19, Victor Hugo lived at No. 30.
www.insecula.com/salle/MS01394.html
Rue du Four
www.insecula.com/salle/MS02019.html
Rue Du Buci
www.insecula.com/salle/MS02008.html
LADUREE. 21 rue Bonaparte (corner of rue Jacob and Bonaparte). Famous for macaroons.
RUE DE BUCI STREET MARKET (except Mon)
Hawkers compete for your attention; artfully-arranged stalls and great-smelling shops compete for your eye and appetite. Cafés lining the street are good for watching the show.
MUSEE DELAXCROIX. 6 rue de Furstenberg. Closed Monday. Open 0945-1700. Museum Card. Last apartment and studio occupied by Delacroix from 1857 to 1863.Personal memorabilia and works of the artist.
MUSEE HEBERT. 85 rue du Cherche-Midi. M: Vaneau. Closed Tue. Open 1230-1800. Museum Card. Works of the painter, Ernest Hébert (1817-190
COUR DE ROHON (Rohon Courtyard)
Often called a magical hideaway. Location of musical film Gigi. This series of tiny courtyards offers a trip back to Renaissance France. Entered from arcade of the Cour du Commerce St-Andre.
www.insecula.com/salle/MS02023.html
COUR DU COMMERCE ST-ANDRE. Romantic 18C cobblestoned street-arcade - often called one of the loveliest sights in Paris.
Le Procope is opposite Cour de Rohon. The worlds first coffeehouse, founded in 1686, is situated at 13 rue de lAncienne-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.
WWW.SLOWTRIPS.COM/PHOTO/S...3/CAT/3399
MUSÉE DE LA MONNAIE. 11 quai de Conti. Closed Mon. Open: 1-6 p.m. Late Wed until 2100. Museum Card. Remarkable collection of coins and medals presenting the history of France from the Renaissance to the present. Stained glass windows from the Renaissance, paintings, engravings.
FRAGONARD, a block west of Café Flore on the corner of rue des St-Pères, Soaps.
LA MAISON IVRE, on elegant rue Jacob (dense with interesting antique shops and bookstores). Sells handmade Provençal pottery. Small yellow and green olive bowls make pretty gifts.
ST-GERMAIN-DES-PRÉS. some say this is the oldest church in Paris. It was built, by the Merovingian King Childebert in 542, to house holy relics. It was rebuilt during the 11th century, the 19th 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 19th 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.
www.paris-views.com/html/...3374,4358,
www.insecula.com/salle/MS01891.html
MARCHÉ SAINT GERMAIN (rue Lobineau 6e, metro Mabillon)
Just north of east end of the Eglise Saint Germain des Prés, has a huge array of produce and prepared food
To the side of the church, in a small square, is Picasso's Hommage to Apollinaire, in memory of the poet
PLACE DE FURSTENBURG. Perhaps the most charming square in Paris. Globed lamppost and Paulownia trees, but is postcard-perfect.
www.insecula.com/salle/MS02237.html
Place St-Sulpice with impressive Fontaine des Quatre-Eveques
www.insecula.com/salle/MS01380.html
www.insecula.com/salle/MS01384.html
ST-SULPICE CHURCH. Large and beautiful Italianate building. Has one of the largest pipe organs in the world, interior is larger than Notre Dame's, and there are Delacroix murals.
Note: don't forget to look for the button on the wall which turns the spotlight on the de la Croix.
www.insecula.com/salle/MS02040.html
END AT JARDIN DU LUXUMBOURG
Option: Walk down toward the river, go past the gallery-filled rue Visconti to #13 rue des Beaux-Arts. Look for a very plain hotel façade, labeled LHôtel. A bronze ram head will be over the entrance and a small plaque will say that Oscar Wilde died here. Back in 1900 it was a seedy place for poor travelers and not the fine establishment it is today. The prestigious Beaux-Arts (art and design school) is at the other end of the street. Take a peek inside at the floor-to-ceiling atrium and/or have a drink at the very pleasant Le Bélier Bar.
www.l-hotel.com/index2-e.php
EATING AND DRINKING
Le Procope 13, rue de l'Ancienne-Comédie
Café de Flore 172, boulevard St-Germain
Brasserie Lipp 151, boulevard St-Germain
Les Deux Magots 6, place St-Germain-des-Prés
Wood-fired ovens of Poilâne at 8 rue du Cherche-Midi
Café Bonaparte, one block down rue Bonaparte toward the seine from les deux maggots.
La Palette 43 Rue de Seine; 33-1/43-26-68-15. You are treading the mosaic floors once brushed by Cézanne's and Braque's soles St-Germain art dealers come here and there are used palettes on the walls, given by Beaux-Arts students.
Lipp: 151, bd Saint-Germain, 75006 Paris. Tel.: 45 48 53 91. Open daily to 2 a.m. French cuisine.
Polidor: 41, rue Monsieur-le-Prince, 75006 Paris. Tel.: 43 26 95 34. Family cooking from FF 100.
Dinner at Le Relais de l?Entrecote on rue St-Benoit This restaurant serves one meal for 20. Steak with a special sauce french fries and a green salad with walnuts.
Cafe Mabillon at the corner of Rue de Seine & Blvd. St. Germain is a good spot for lunch/people watching
La Cigale at 11 bis rue Chomel (Métro : Sèvres-Babylone) is a lunch treat that serves only soufflés.
Marco Polo restaurant with outside seating at 8, rue de Condé, on the corner of rue St-Sulpice.
Bar de la Croix Rouge , 2 carrefour de la Croix Rouge, sandwiches and salads
Cosi at 54, rue de Seine, sandwiches and salads
Bistro des Augustins, 39 quai des Grands Augustins, wine bar
Le Sauvignon at 80, rue des Sts-Pères, wine bar.
SHOPPING
Christian Constant, 37 rue d'Assas, for amazing chocolates
Comtesse du Berry at 1, rue de Sèvres for superb foie gras
Anne-Sophie Duval at 5 Quai Malaquais
l'Arc en Seine, 31 rue de Seine, art nouveau and deco things
Debauve and Gallois in the 7th on rue des Saints Peres (just north of bd St-Germain), chocolatier
Les Nereides on rue du Four, jewelry shops Salesgirls go out of their way to be helpful and friendly.
