Champs Elysées History
The Champs-Elysees was initially fields and market gardens, until 1616, when Marie de Medici decided to extend the garden axis of the Palais des Tuileries by means of an street of trees.
Guillaume de L’Isle’s map of Paris shows that a short stretch of roads and fields and market garden plots still separated the grand axe of the Tuileries gardens from the planted “Avenue des Tuilleries” as late as 1716.
By the late 1700s, the Champs-Elysees had become a fashionable boulevard and the plants on either side had thickened enough to be given formal rectangular glades, identified as cabinets de verdure. The gardens of homes built along the Faubourg St-Honore backed onto the formal bosquets, with the grandest of them all being the Élysees Palace.
A semi-circle of house fronts nowadays defined the north side of the Rond Point.
Queen Marie Antoinette drove with her friends and took music lessons at the Grand Hotel de Crillon on the Place Louis XV. The boulevard from the Rond Point in the direction of the Etoile was built up during the Empire. To visit this wonderful place you can take an appartement montmartre
In 1828, the Avenue des Champs-Elysees became city property, and footpaths, fountains and gas lighting had been added.
Over the time, the boulevard has undergone numerous transitions, most recently in 1994, when the sidewalks had been widened.
Because of its dimension and proximity to several Paris monuments such as the Arc de Triomphe, the Champs-Elysees has been made the location of several famous military parades, the most famous of which were the march of German troops celebrating the Fall of France on 14 June 1940 and the subsequent entrance of free French and American forces into the city after its liberation on 25 August 1944.
On Bastille Day, every year the main military parade in Europe passes down the Champs-Élysees, reviewed by the President of the Republic. To go in Paris you can book your location appartement montmartre
Each year from the end of November to end of December, the ‘Champs-Elysees’ Committee contributes to the lighting of the Champs-Elysees used for the holidays season.
The Champs-Elysees is moreover the traditional end of the final stage of the Tour de France.
Post a comment