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About Secrets of Paris

American-born travel journalist and guidebook author Heather Stimmler-Hall created the Secrets of Paris in 1999 to share the hidden side of the City of Light. Discover what you've been missing:

* Private Customized Tours
* Free Paris Resource Guide
* Calendar of interesting Paris events
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Read more about the Secrets of Paris here

Calendar of Paris Events

February 25  - March 4
Cows, chickens, piggies and food, food, food at the annual Salon International de l'Agriculture, at the Paris Porte de Versailles conference center, 9am-7pm (March 2nd until 11pm). Entry €12. Celebrate the diversity of French agrigulture in over 1000 stands and 4500 animals. Not convinced? Check out the article from the 2009 show here.

March 25
Mark your calendars for the next SOS Help Spring Book Sale, today from 12 pm to 4 pm at Orrick Law Offices (31, avenue Pierre 1er de Serbie, 16th). Paperbacks are only 1€ and hard covers are 2€.  To donate books in good condition, you may drop them off at the venue Saturday, March 24, 12-4pm or Sunday, March 25, 12-4pm.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL CALENDAR

Heather's Lady's Guide to the Sexy City

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« Arms & Armor of the Musée de l'Armée | Main | Tourism Office Kiosks »
Monday
Jul312006

Château de Vincennes almost ready for its close-up

The Château de Vincennes isn't one of the city's "must see" monuments. It's usually not even in most visitors' top 20. But as soon as the renovations are complete (supposedly by January 2007), I have a feeling that will change.

chateauvincennes1.jpg
The 14th-century keep.

You can go visit now, but the 14th-century keep (or donjon, in French), the tallest in Europe (50 meters), is still closed off.

 chateauvincennes5.jpg
From the enceinte wall, the 17th-century Queen's pavilion (right) and the 16th-century Sainte-Chapelle (left).

 

The guided tours get you into the chapel, the dry moat where prisoners used to exercise, the royal Sainte-Chapelle, and the keep enceinte (main enclosure surrounding the tower).

chateauvincennes2.jpg
Construction at the base of the keep.

Located at the end of the metro line 1 (station Château de Vincennes, bien sûr) on the edge of the Bois de Vincennes, the château was a royal residence from the 12th century until the 18th century.

 chateauvincennes6.jpg
The keep enceinte, and in the back to the right, the edge of the outer wall where it was bombed in 1944.

 

It still has two of its original medieval towers, moat, gatehouse, outer wall (except where the Nazis bombed a hole), and the royal chapel with 16th-century stained glass windows.

 chateauvincennes4.jpg

The bridge to the keep.

 

The17th-century apartments of the king and queen and the block houses from the 19th century now house the Ministry of Defense history department.

chateauvincennes3.jpg

The day I was there, a very hot day, an official fireman's ceremony was taking place in the main courtyard.

Visiting

The château is open daily 10am-noon and 1:15pm-6pm. Guided tours are organised every day (enceinte of the keep, moat, Sainte-Chapelle), lasting 1 hr 15 min. In English at 3pm, € 6.50 (full rate), € 4.50 (reduced rate), free for under 18s.

http://www.chateau-vincennes.fr

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