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  2. Catacombs of Paris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catacombs_of_Paris

    Entrance to the Catacombs. As one visits the catacombs, a sign above reads Arrête! C'est ici l'empire de la Mort ("Stop! The empire of Death lies here"). [22] The Catacombs of Paris became a curiosity for more privileged Parisians from their creation, an early visitor being the Count of Artois (later Charles X of France) in 1787. Public visits ...

  3. Place Denfert-Rochereau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_Denfert-Rochereau

    The tax-collection pavilion of the Enfer barrier. The entrance to the catacombs is behind the double-gate on the left. This square owes its original official recognition to letters patent dated 9 August 1760, which applied to the part of the site that was located inside the old Wall of the Farmers-General (i.e. the northeastern portion of the present Place Denfert-Rochereau).

  4. Barrière d'Enfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrière_d'Enfer

    The entrance to the Catacombs of Paris is located next to building No. 1. No. 4 (the western building) houses of the Highway Service. Beneath the building starting in August 1944 were the headquarters of Colonel Henri Rol-Tanguy, from which he gave orders pertaining to the French Resistance and the Liberation of Paris.

  5. Mines of Paris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mines_of_Paris

    The Paris area was a relatively flat sea-bottom during the early Cretaceous period: first in a deep-sea environment, then under a more agitated near-shoreline sea towards the end of the same period, Paris's largely silica-based sedimentary deposits became, under the action of pressure and the carbonic acid content of seawater, a thick deposit ...

  6. Holy Innocents' Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Innocents'_Cemetery

    The cemetery and the Catacombs to which the remains were relocated play an important part in Barbara Hambly's novel 1988 Those Who Hunt the Night. In Anne Rice 's 1985 The Vampire Lestat , Armand's coven of vampires resides in the Cimetière des Innocents when Lestat de Lioncourt first encounters them, and they remain there until shortly before ...

  7. Errancis Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Errancis_Cemetery

    The skeletal remains were moved to the Catacombs of Paris between 1844 and 1859 (probably around 1848) [3] when the Boulevard de Courcelles was constructed. Unlike the other major revolutionary cemetery—the Madeleine Cemetery —there is no plaque in the Catacombs to indicate the location of the transferred bones.

  8. Lutetian limestone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutetian_Limestone

    In addition to Paris, the Lutetian limestone also extends north and eastwards through France, and has also been mined in areas such as Rheims, Laon and Soissons. [2] Its formation dates to the Eocene epoch's Lutetian age, between . The name "Lutetian" derives from Lutetia (French, Lutèce) which was the name of Paris in ancient times. The ...

  9. les UX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_UX

    The UX (short for Urban eXperiment) is an underground organization of Urban explorers that improves hidden corners of Paris.Their work includes restoring the Panthéon clock, [1] building a cinema — complete with a bar and a restaurant — in a section of the Paris Catacombs underneath the Trocadéro, restoring medieval crypts, and staging plays and readings in monuments after dark.