PARIS, City, France

pârˈĭs, Fr. pärēˈ, city (1999 pop. 2,115,757; metropolitan area est. pop. 11,000,000), N central France, capital of the country, on the Seine River. It is the commercial and industrial focus of France and a cultural and intellectual center of international renown. The city possesses an indefinable unity of atmosphere that has fascinated writers, poets, and painters for centuries. Paris is sometimes called the City of Light in tribute to its intellectual preeminence as well as to its beautiful appearance.

Paris is the center of many major newspapers and periodicals, as well as all the major French radio and television stations. Elegant stores and hotels, lavish nightclubs, theaters, and gourmet restaurants help make tourism the biggest industry in Paris. Other leading industries manufacture luxury articles, high-fashion clothing, perfume, and jewelry. Heavy industry, notably automobile manufacture, is located in the suburbs. About one quarter of the French labor force is concentrated in the Paris area.

Transportation Facilities

Situated in the center of the Paris basin (see Île-de-France), and only 90 mi (145 km) from the English Channel, the city handles a great volume of shipping. Orly and Charles de Gaulle airports (the latter opened in 1974) and many major railroad stations make Paris one of the great transportation centers of western Europe. The Paris metro (subway), built in 1900, was modernized and extended during the 1970s. There are now 16 principal metro lines and a high-speed express subway system servicing the suburbs. The system's hub, Chatelet Les-Halles, is perhaps the largest, busiest underground station in the world. Paris is also the hub of the national rail system, with high-speed trains connecting it to most major European cities.

Points of Interest

Paris is divided into roughly equal sections by the Seine. On the right (northern) bank are the Bois de Boulogne, Arc de Triomphe, Bibliothèque nationale, Élysée Palace, Georges Pompidou National Center for Art and Culture (see Beaubourg), Place de la Concorde, Opéra, Comédie Française, Louvre, Palais de Chaillot, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Grande Arche de la Défense, Champs Élysées, and other great streets, sites, and boulevards. In the eastern part of the right bank is the Museum of the Art and History of Judaism, the Place de la Bastille and the Bastille Opera; to the north is Montmartre, the highest area in Paris, topped by the Church of Sacré-Cœur. Much of the right bank, which has many of the most fashionable streets and shops, has a stately air. At night many monuments and boulevards are floodlit. In the city's northeastern outskirts is the Parc de la Villette, home of the large Cité de la Musique, opened in the early 1990s, and the planned site of a number of performance and exhibition spaces.

The left bank, with the Sorbonne, the French Academy, the Panthéon (see under pantheon), the Luxembourg Palace and Gardens, the Jardin des Plantes (site of the National Natural History Museum), the Chamber of Deputies, the Quai d'Orsay, and the Hotel des Invalides, is the governmental and to a large extent the intellectual section. The Latin Quarter, for nearly a thousand years the preserve of university students and faculty; the Faubourg Saint-Germain section, at once aristocratic and a haven for students and artists (the celebrated Café des Deux Magots and Café de Flore are there); and Montparnasse are the most celebrated left-bank districts. The Eiffel Tower stands by the Seine on the Champ-de-Mars.

The historical nucleus of Paris is the Île de la Cité, a small boat-shaped island largely occupied by the huge Palais de Justice and the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris. It is connected with the smaller Île Saint-Louis, occupied by elegant houses of the 17th and 18th cent. Characteristic of Paris are the tree-lined quays along the Seine (famed, on the left bank, for their open-air bookstalls), the historic bridges that span the Seine, and the vast tree-lined boulevards that replaced the city walls. Skyscrapers, apartment complexes, and highways have been added to the Paris scene in recent years.

Government and People

Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements (districts or boroughs), each of which has a local council and a mayor, but most of the power is held by the mayor of the City of Paris who is chosen by the city's council. Paris and its suburbs together make up the eight departments of the Île-de-France administrative region, which is governed by an elected assembly, chairman, and supervisor and overseen by a prefect appointed by the state.

Immigrants to France now constitute nearly 20% of Paris's population. The majority of these are Algerian, Moroccan, and Tunisian. Large groups of Indochinese have also immigrated to Paris. About 75% of all Parisians live in the suburbs due to high costs and a high population density in the city. New towns have been built, consolidating suburban areas, and a great deal of manufacturing and other industry takes place in the suburbs.

History

Early History

Julius Caesar conquered Paris in 52 b.c. It was then a fishing village, called Lutetia Parisiorum (the Parisii were a Gallic tribe), on the Île de la Cité. Under the Romans the town spread to the left bank and acquired considerable importance under the later emperors. The vast catacombs under Montparnasse and the baths (now in the Cluny Mus.) remain from the Roman period. Legend says that St. Denis, first bishop of Paris, was martyred on Montmartre (hence the name) and that in the 5th cent. St. Geneviève, the patron saint of Paris, preserved the city from destruction by the Huns. On several occasions in its early history Paris was threatened by barbarian and Norman invasions, which at times drove the inhabitants back to the Île de la Cité.

Clovis I and several other Merovingian kings made Paris their capital; under Charlemagne it became a center of learning. In 987, Hugh Capet, count of Paris, became king of France. The Capetians firmly established Paris as the French capital. The city grew as the power of the French kings increased. In the 11th cent. the city spread to the right bank. During the next two centuries—the reign of Philip Augustus (1180–1223) is especially notable for the growth of Paris—streets were paved and the city walls enlarged; the first Louvre (a fortress) and several churches, including Notre-Dame, were constructed or begun; and the schools on the left bank were organized into the Univ. of Paris. One of them, the Sorbonne, became a fountainhead of theological learning with Albertus Magnus and St. Thomas Aquinas among its scholars. The university community constituted an autonomous borough; another was formed on the right bank by merchants ruled by their own provost. In 1358, under the leadership of the merchant provost Étienne Marcel, Paris first assumed the role of an independent commune and rebelled against the dauphin (later Charles V). During the period of the Hundred Years War the city suffered civil strife (see Armagnacs and Burgundians), occupation by the English (1419–36), famine, and the Black Death.

During the Renaissance

The Renaissance reached Paris in the 16th cent. during the reign of Francis I (1515–47). At this time the Louvre was transformed from a fortress to a Renaissance palace. In the Wars of Religion (1562–98), Parisian Catholics, who were in the great majority, took part in the massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day (1572), forced Henry III to leave the city on the Day of Barricades (1588), and accepted Henry IV only after his conversion (1593) to Catholicism. Cardinal Richelieu, Louis XIII's minister, established the French Academy and built the Palais Royal and the Luxembourg Palace. During the Fronde, Paris once again defied the royal authority. Louis XIV, distrustful of the Parisians, transferred (1682) his court to Versailles. Parisian industries profited from the lavishness of Versailles; the specialization in luxury goods dates from that time. J. H. Mansart under Louis XIV and François Mansart, J. G. Soufflot, and J. A. Gabriel under Louis XV created some of the most majestic prospects of modern Paris.

The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries

During the late 17th and the 18th cent. Paris acquired further glory as the scene of many of France's greatest cultural achievements: the plays of Molière, Racine, and Corneille; the music of Lully, Rameau, and Gluck; the paintings of Watteau, Fragonard, and Boucher; and the salons where many of the philosophes of the Enlightenment gathered. At the same time, growing industries had resulted in the creation of new classes—the bourgeoisie and proletariat—concentrated in such suburbs (faubourgs) as Saint-Antoine and Saint-Denis; in the opening events of the French Revolution, city mobs stormed the Bastille (July, 1789) and hauled the royal family from Versailles to Paris (Oct., 1789). Throughout the turbulent period of the Revolution the city played a central role.

Napoleon to the Commune

Napoleon (emperor, 1804–15) began a large construction program (including the building of the Arc de Triomphe, the Vendôme Column, and the arcaded Rue de Rivoli) and enriched the city's museums with artworks removed from conquered cities. In the course of his downfall Paris was occupied twice by enemy armies (1814, 1815). In the first half of the 19th cent. Paris grew rapidly. In 1801 it had 547,000 people; in 1817, 714,000; in 1841, 935,000; and in 1861, 1,696,000. The revolutions of July, 1830, and Feb., 1848, both essentially Parisian events, had repercussions throughout Europe. Culturally, the city was at various times the home or host of most of the great European figures of the age. Balzac, Hugo, Chopin, Berlioz, Liszt, Wagner, Delacroix, Ingres, and Daumier were a few of the outstanding personalities. The grand outline of modern Paris was the work of Baron Georges Haussmann, who was appointed prefect by Napoleon III. The great avenues, boulevards, and parks are his work. During the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71), Paris was besieged for four months by the Germans and then surrendered. After the Germans withdrew, Parisian workers rebelled against the French government and established the Commune of Paris, which was bloodily suppressed.

Under the Third Republic

With the establishment of the Third French Republic and relative stability, Paris became the great industrial and transportation center it is today. Two epochal events in modern cultural history that took place in Paris were the first exhibition of impressionist painting (1874) and the premiere of Stravinsky's Sacre du Printemps (1913). In World War I the Germans failed to reach Paris. After 1919 the outermost city fortifications were replaced by housing developments, including the Cité Universitaire, which houses thousands of students. During the 1920s, Paris was home to many disillusioned artists and writers from the United States and elsewhere. German troops occupied Paris during World War II from June 14, 1940, to Aug. 25, 1944. The city was not seriously damaged by the war.

Contemporary Paris

Paris was the headquarters of NATO from 1950 to 1967; it is the headquarters of UNESCO. A program of cleaning the city's major buildings and monuments was completed in the 1960s. The city was the scene in May, 1968, of serious disorders, beginning with a student strike, that nearly toppled the Fifth Republic. In 1971, Les Halles, Paris's famous central market, called by Zola the "belly" of Paris, was dismantled. Construction began immediately on Chatelet Les-Halles, Paris's new metro hub, which was completed in 1977. The Forum des Halles, a partially underground, multistory commercial and shopping center, opened in 1979. Other developments include the Georges Pompidou National Center for Art and Culture, built in 1977, which includes the National Museum of Modern Art. The Louvre underwent extensive renovation, and EuroDisney, a multibillion dollar theme and amusement park, opened in the Parisian suburbs in 1992. A number of major projects in the city were initiated by President François Mitterrand (1981–95); they include the new Bibliothèque Nationale, the glass pyramid at the Louvre, Grande Arche de la Défense, Arab Institute, Bastille Opera, and Cité de la Musique.

Bibliography

See J. Flanner, Paris Journal (2 vol., 1965–71; repr. 1977) and Paris Was Yesterday, 1925–39 (1988); M. Kessel, The History of Paris, from Caesar to Saint Louis (tr. 1969); L. Bernard, The Emerging City: Paris in the Age of Louis XIV (1970); M. Guerrini, Napoleon and Paris: Thirty Years of History (tr. and abr. 1971); D. Thomson, Renaissance Paris (1984); D. Roche, The People of Paris (1987); J. Seigel, Bohemian Paris (1987); B. Geremek, The Margins of Society in Late Medieval Europe (1987); J.-M. Pérouse de Montclos, Paris: City of Art (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...buildings which extended up to the city wall, until they reached the...put up in the western half of Paris, in the luxury city proper...surrounding the northern half of Paris had orders not to allow any...historical significance of the Paris Commune of 1871, we shall find
...country and not of the cities. One of the most important things in the city was the introduction...The houses the shops in Paris and in the other large cities suddenly became very...the stockings, and as France makes the fashions for...created in the cities in France made the styles. The...
...National in European Cinema 9 Cinema and the City 10 Paris and the 1930s 12 Paris and French Cinema of the 1930s 13 France and the Emigres 15 City of Darkness...Boundaries and Early European Sound Cinema 29 Paris as Staging Ground for the Early Sound...
...fact, as Lefebvre showed, things were much more piecemeal and conjunctural, but in both city and countryside the conviction rapidly took hold that France as a whole was in the grip of an epidemic of brigandage, that brigands were hand in glove...
...hasten their entry into Paris, the Minister of Public...the American Minister in France, who has remained in Paris during the two terrible sieges which the city has undergone, and who...was so much needed. " PARIS, April 23, 1871...
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...descriptions of Paris published in even...representing the city became an essential...nineteenth-century France (Clark 23-24...learned to look at cities and to describe...elaborated in both Paris and Algiers. Paris, the city of modern life...radical change in Paris, Algiers could...nineteenth-century France is incomplete...
...Coeur. The City has become a...Jungers view of Paris and of France, during his...attitudes to France, based in part...relationship with the city itself. Part...at being in Paris had to do with...at the great city. I saw the...from history. Cities are like women...his arrival in Paris, clearly presumed...
...close examination of cities, but Rosenberg focuses...on North Africans in Paris. Lewis, while more...the French, because in France the creation of benefit...populations crossing into France, granted benefit rights...the construction of the Paris Prefecture of Polices...on foreigners in the city, which is the object...
...Les Entrees royales a Paris de Marie dAngleterre (1514) et Claude de France (1517). Ed. Cynthia...royal entries into Paris by Marie dAngleterre (1514) and Claude de France (1517) constitute...Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Paris as Bazaar: Tristan Corbieres Poetry of the City. by Katherine Lunn...comment on how the city is driven by labor."Paris" II gives the other...Tristan Corbiere. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, Princeton UP, 1960...
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Jakob + Macfarlane: City of Fashion and Design, Paris, France. Jakob + Macfarlanes aptitude...ILLUSTRATION OMITTED The Docks of Paris (as the building is known...train. In 2005, the Parisian city authorities staged a competition...
...Wonderful country France ... pity about...changing views of Paris by Andrew Hussey...portrait of a city Alistair Home...and accents of Paris that have played...equivalents of cockney city-dwellers...Wonderful country France...pity about...Homes history of Paris -- the stylish...
...Battle of Algiers on Paris Metro: France Faces Its Muslims...among those born in France, has vanished altogether...What the inner cities are to America...from the center of Paris to La Courneuve...there you go to the city of Four Thousand...were built. Now France has to cope with...
...my circumambulation of Paris is viewing the Seine at...clings to its banks. Paris begins and ends as a village...of silk that slices the city in half, the Seine also binds it together. All of Paris ripples out from it...traveled extensively in France. Sebastien Rake is an...
April in Paris: This Romantic City Is Home to a Rich Black...chemical analyst who came to Paris in the late 90s on a research...She fell in love with the city, and after returning home...back. Tom followed her to Paris, where they were married...
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PARIS, JE TAIME! City of Light, City of Night...Coeur. Inset: Tour De France Cyclists Passing the Arc...waving hysterical. This is Paris atits carnival best. It...laststage of the Tour de France clinched it: it just had...
...Artists Get Brush-Off as City Hall Splashes Out. by...killers has descended on Paris. Zipping through the...the action ordered by Paris City Hall may fizzle into...solved this problem, Paris Mayor Jean Tiberi said...a US import which hit France along with rap music...
...Football: LAST TANGO IN PARIS; UEFA CUP 1st RD 2nd LEG: PSG 2 DERRY CITY 0, ALL LAST NIGHTS ACTION FROM FRANCE (PSG Win 2-0 on Aggregate...Garry Doyle REPORTS FROM PARIS THERE was to be no fairytale...benefiting from the freedom of Paris to power Paulo Cesars...
...Football: LAST TANGO IN PARIS; UEFA CUP 1st RD 2nd LEG: PSG 2 DERRY CITY 0 ALL LAST NIGHTS ACTION FROM FRANCE PSG Win 2-0 on Aggregate...Garry Doyle REPORTS FROM PARIS THERE was to be no fairytale...benefiting from the freedom of Paris to power Paulo Cesars...
...discuss what the City of Light - Paris - can teach us about cities. The program, titled, "Paris Isnt Burning...that any U.S. city receives. Also...social geography of Paris differs from that of American cities - the affluent...
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PARIS , city, France par is, Fr. pare...family from Versailles to Paris (Oct., 1789). Throughout...of the Revolution the city played a central role...removed from conquered cities. In the course of his downfall Paris was occupied twice by...
ORLEANS , city, France city (1990 pop. 107,965...of Loiret dept., N central France, on the Loire River. A commercial...Capetians, the first kings of France, the city became (10th cent.), after Paris, the principal residence of...
SAINT-DENIS , city, France saN-d ne , city (1990 pop...Denis dept., N central France. It is an industrial suburb N of Paris. Metals, chemicals, machinery...richest and most famous in France. Around 750 a new sanctuary...
LYONS , city, France Fr. Lyon both: lyoN...Rhone dept., E central France, at the confluence of the...metropolis it is second only to Paris. It leads Europe in silk...founded 1506, the oldest in France); a university (founded...
...Frances capital and largest city is Paris . Land Although...diversity. The heart of France N of the Loire River is the province of Ile-de-France, which occupies the greater part of the Paris basin, a fertile depression...Comte. South-central France is occupied by the rugged...a great effect on the cities, especially Paris and...
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