Wednesday 23 February 2011

The Catacombs



Catacombs Visitors Entrance Location: 1 Avenue du Colonel Henri Rol-Tanguy, Place Denfert Rochereau, 75014 Paris
How to Get to the Paris Catacombs: Paris Metro stop Denfert-Rochereau; Paris RER B stop Denfert-Rochereau; Paris bus lines 38 & 68 stop nearby; closest (pay) parking lot is at Saint-Jacques Boulevard
Catacombs Open Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 10am-5pm (last admission 4pm)
Catacombs Admission Fee: €8 adult, €4 ages 14-26, €6 ages 60+, children under 13 free (I don't think they sell advance tickets, tried looking but couldn't find anything)
More Information: The Musee Carnavalet oversees the Catacombs, and you can get more visitor information here(only in French). There is additional information about the history of the Catacombs on this website (in English & French).
Looking at google maps the catacombs are 2 km away from our hotel (Luxia) so it will take about 30Mins if you want to walk there.
Heres the google map link:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=H%C3%B4tel+Luxia+08+Rue+Sevestre&daddr=1+Place+Denfert-Rochereau,+75014+Paris,+France+(Parisian+Catacombs)&hl=en&geocode=FRRg6QId8cAjACG_4RmGOuCK6w%3BFdkl6QIde5YjACEO7FFiPuG0lQ&mra=ltm&dirflg=w&sll=48.841786,2.338371&sspn=0.018669,0.045447&ie=UTF8&ll=48.841475,2.337642&spn=0.01867,0.045447&z=15

Things to know about visiting the Paris Catacombs:
  • Visits to the Catacombs can last between 45 minutes and 1.5 hours, so be sure to allot enough time.
  • It’s underground, so it can get chilly (it’s usually around 57F/14C) – it’s not a bad idea to bring a light sweater, even in the summer.
  • The tours cover roughly 2km of walking, including lots of steps up and down, so if you have trouble with walking and/or stairs you might want to sit this one out.
  • Children under the age of 14 can’t visit the Catacombs without an adult.
  • There are no bathrooms in the Catacombs, so go before you go underground!
  • There’s also no coat check or lockers underground, so whatever you’re carrying with you is what you’ll have to carry throughout your visit.
  • There’s a limit to the number of people that can be in the Catacombs at a time, so you may find entries restricted from time to time.
  • Group visits of between 10-20 people are permitted only from Tuesday-Friday, only in the mornings, and only by prior arrangement with the Musee Carnavalet (call 01 44 59 58 31 for information).
  • The Catacombs you’ll visit represent only a small corner of Paris’ underground tunnel system. There are over 300km of tunneling which spans both Left and Right bank arrondissements.
The Paris Catacombs (or Catacombes de Paris, as they’re called in French) are a maze of tunnels and crypts underneath the city streets where Parisians placed the bones of their dead for almost 30 years. Prior to the creation of the Catacombs in the mid-1700s, residents buried their dead in cemeteries near churches as is still customary in most places.
But as the city grew, the cemeteries quickly ran out of space. Additionally, improper burial techniques often led to ground water and land near cemeteries becoming contaminated and spreading disease to those living nearby, so city officials moved to condemn all the cemeteries within city limits and move the bodies in those cemeteries elsewhere.
The decision was made to use an underground section of quarries in Paris, and the bones from Paris’ city cemeteries were moved underground between 1786 and 1788. The process was conducted with reverence and discretion – the quarry space was blessed before any bones were moved there, bones were always moved in a quiet parade of carts accompanied by priests, and these movements always took place at night. The quarries continued to be used as the collection point for the bones from Paris’ cemeteries through 1814 and now contain the bodies of roughly 6-7 million Parisians.
catacombs3What’s particularly surprising about the Catacombs of Paris isn’t that they’re a tourist attraction in modern-day Paris – what’s surprising is that they started attracting visitors even before the last bones were moved in 1814, and they were already a major attraction just over 50 years later. In fact, in the late 1800s the larger underground crypt areas were even used as mini-concert halls!
Even though people were touring the Catacombs starting in 1867, the historic significance of this network of tunnels wasn’t finished being written. They were used by members of the French Resistance during World War II as they hid from the Germans, and the Germans also used a portion of the tunnels during World War II as a bunker.
The tunnels underwent a major renovation in 2007-2008 to make them more accessible to and safer for visitors.

2 comments:

  1. good job! Be nice walk if we set off around 9 ish Friday morning? Will can you see if we can book tickets in advance?

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  2. Its not looking good for booking in advance, so far ive only been able to find two websites to buy tickets in advance and there are no available slots for March. Even tickets for the following months look limited.

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