Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Explore the French Wine Roads

Wine has a central place in France “Art de Vivre” and is a staple of French cuisine.  France has a long tradition in the cultivation of wine that goes back to Antiquity.  Fine wine aficionados know how important and influential French wine is and they also know the intricacies of the wines across the many regions of France. Anyone who has gone on a wine tour will tell you that afterwards, you have a new found appreciation for of the "Drink of the Gods"  afterwards. So follow the Wine Routes of France and enjoy discovering some of the most iconic producing wine regions in the world. 


French wine tours through Enchanted-France are custom crafted travel packages that are sure to appeal to the wine connoisseur in all of us. See the sprawling vineyards and stay at luxurious chateaux and see where the most popular and renowned wines in the world are made.

Enchanted-France wine tours take you across the countryside to see renowned wine producing AOC's.  Vouvray and Chinon in  the Loire Valley, Margaux and Saint Emilion in Bordeaux, Pommard and Gevray Chambertin in Burgundy, Chateauneuf du Pape in the Rhone Valley, Champagne and other quintessential wine producing locales. 

So enjoy a taste the world’s most sought after wines right where they’re made! Enjoy seeing breathtaking vineyards and chateaux while you learn about the wine making process as well as the estates and the cultural significance of the wines they are making.

Discover the very best French wine tours available from Enchanted-France today!

For custom wine tours visit www.enchanted-franc.com

#travelfrance #frenchwinetours

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The King of Carnival is back on the French Rivieral!!

Courtesy: Office du Tourisme Nice
The Nice Carnival is back.  From February 13 to March 1  revelers welcome back the King and its court.   For two fun filled weeks, parades of flower bedecked floats accompanied by thousands of musicians  will snake along the coastal seafront on Promenade des Anglais and on Avenue Massena, loudly cheered by delirious crowds. This year  the "King of Music" is being  honored.  A parade 18 floats of giant figures made of colored paper-mache will rock, samba and salsa day and night in the streets of Nice . At the close of the carnival on March 1 the night sky will be illuminated by a giant firework display over the Mediterranean Sea. 

Courtesy: Office du Tourisme de Nice-Fireworks 2011

Vive Carnaval! Vive Nice! 

Visit www.enchanted-france.com for your next vacation to Nice and the French Riviera

#Nice, #Nice Carnaval , # French Riviera






Thursday, February 12, 2015

All that Paris has to offer and More!

www.enchanted-france.com
It’s hard to take in Paris and surrounding areas in the limited amount of time that some travel packages offer. For most, it has been a lifelong dream to see the city of love and romance and we believe they should have the opportunity to experience everything that Paris has to offer. We offer several luxurious packages that offer all the things that you’ve wanted to get out of the Paris experience and more.

Paris tourism is popular among many travelers around the world. From first timers to repeat visitors, and from newlyweds to families, Paris is one of the most visited cities in Europe, and for a good reason!

The sights, the history and the culture are all monumental draws to this iconic city that is Paris.

  • Art
  • Architecture 
  • Fashion
  • Shopping
  • Food
www.enchanted-france.com

Couple these with the incomparable energy of the City of Lights and you will find yourself in what seems like a dream world. But you don’t need to pinch yourself, we swear it’s real!

Our Paris travel packages can range from including historic sightseeing or seclusion is the most romantic city in the world. We have mastered Paris tourism with our uniquely crafted French journeys for discerning travels.

Get a better travel package – see what Enchanted-France has to offer today!


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Is the Eiffel Tower a Smoke Stack?

Paris architectural landscape is quite diverse and crosses over two thousand years of history from Gothic  to Renaissance, Classical to Baroque , Art Deco to Art Nouveau, modern to contemporary.  All together, the pot-pourri of architectural styles makes what Paris is today, a visual feast.  However, when first built these iconic Parisian landmarks :  Eiffel Tower, Pompidou Center and  the Louvre Pyramid  generated formidable controversies.  Today they symbolize Paris and are cherished by Parisians and visitors alike.

Eiffel Tower circa 1889
The Eiffel Tower was built in 1889 for the Universal Exposition (World Fair) to showcase the new method of steel building construction and the progress in France's 19th century technological advancements.  A design competition calling for a tall tower was won by structural engineer Gustave Eiffel and his partners Maurice  Koechlin, Emile Nougira and Stephan Savestre.  Many Parisians and among them prominent artists like Guy de Maupassant, Alexandre Dumas, Paul Verlaine and even Charles Garnier  of the Paris Opera were against a metallic tower in the middle of Paris that they considered would destroy the harmonious city landscape of stone buildings and monuments.  One detractor described the proposed tower as a "half built smoke stack", another a "belfry skeleton" and yet another "a truly tragic street lamp".  Local residents who worried  that pieces of metal would fall on their nearby buildings even sued to halt construction of the tower.  It took two years (twice the time it was originally planned) to build the monument  but right from the opening day of the fair, naysayers were proved wrong as the tower became a huge success.   At 300 meter high it was the highest structure in the world until New York Chrysler Building was erected in 1930.

At the conclusion of the World Fair, opponents demanded that the tower be destroyed but Gustave Eiffel fought to keep the tower for scientific experiments - Subsequently the top of the tower  has been used as a weather station as well as a platform for telephone, radio and TV transmission.

Today the Eiffel Tower stands as  the symbol of Paris and more than 6 million tourists visit it each year.

A Colorful Skeleton
Pompidou Center-Enchanted France
The Pompidou center also known as Beaubourg Museum was inaugurated in 1977.  a brain-child of President Pompidou (1969-1974), this museum is dedicated to modern art and is the largest of its kind in Europe. From its conception, the structure was the subject of much controversy.  First, its  location was criticized by many as the building and nearby underground shopping complex was to be erected on the site of Les Halles -- the 800 year old  Parisian central market.   Many Parisians were opposed to moving the old central market to the suburbs thereby destroying an iconic neighborhood of Paris. Secondly, the building designed by Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers was not to the liking of many who felt that the exposed exo-skeleton of boldly colored pipes and tubes clashed with the traditional buildings surrounding it.  Today, the museum is one of the most impressive structures in Paris attracting 26,000  visitors daily who come to admire its amazing contemporary art collection as well to soak up the  lively and entertaining atmosphere  that takes place outside on its plaza.

A Pyramid for All Ages
Louvre Pyramid-Enchanted France
President Mitterand had great architectural ambitions for  Paris when he was elected in 1981.  Under his 14 years presidency, Paris undertook major architectural transformations notably with the building of Grand Louvre, Defense Arch, the Opera Bastille and  the National Library, now known as the Francois Mitterand Library. It is the Louvre project that generated much controversy notably the building of the glass pyramid in the center of the Louvre main courtyard.  Chinese-American architect I.M Pei's design was selected from among many entries submitted by international architectural firms.   The pyramid was conceived to serve as the main entrance to the museum. Up until its inauguration, critics of the Pyramid concept felt it would clash with the classical architecture of the Louvre Palace.  These critics were proven wrong when the Grand Louvre was inaugurated in 1989 to much international acclaim.   The New Times described it as an "exquisite object, less a real building than an elegant abstraction, floating in the Louvre courtyard amid a set of new reflecting pools and fountains."  The pyramid is today an iconic  Parisian landmark as much as the Eiffel Tower.

For your next visit of Paris and the French countryside contact www.enchanted-france.com 

tag: #Paris, # Eiffel Tower, # Louvre, # Pompidou Center






Monday, January 12, 2015

Palais Garnier


 Palais Garnier Opera house, the Parisian 19th century architectural landmark, was inaugurated 140 years ago on January 5, 1875. It was the brain-child of Emperor Napoleon III and his famed urban planner Baron Haussman.  It sits at the top of the wide Avenue of Opera and was meant to replace an earlier opera house located on rue Le Pelletier that had been the site in 1858 of an assassination attempt against the Emperor Napoleon III.  The  Italian  revolutionary Felice Orsini  (who felt the Emperor was an obstacle to Italian independence) hiding in the narrow alley of the theatre, tossed three bombs that  killed 8  people and wounded many.  The Emperor and his wife were unharmed.  Consequently,  the Emperor requested the building of  an opera venue in a  more opened location.

The architect , Charles Garnier, was picked from a design competition that included the architect renovator Viollet Leduc, a favorite of the Empress Eugenie.  Work started in 1861 and took more than 14 years to complete because of  interruptions  due  to the Franco- Prussian war (1870) when Paris was under siege, the subsequent Parisian insurection ( Commune ) and the collapse of the Second Empire (1871).




The  Palais Garnier  is of Beaux Arts style - a mix of classical Roman, Renaissance and Baroque.  Its exterior facades  feature  loggias, balconies and columns sourmounted by busts of  musicians and composers like Mozart, Rossini, Beethoven, Mayerber and Halevy. The sculpture groups adorning the main facade represent artistic muses- music, danse, lyric poetry, drama and opera.  A statue depicting Apollo by Millet rises at top of the dome in the center of the building.






The interior of Palais Garnier  is no less impressive and features a grand white marble staircase framed by an onyx balustrade; a gilded grand foyer, 54 meter long decorated with paintings and frescoes by Paul Baudry and a horseshoe shaped gold and red velvet auditorium  adorned at its center by a six ton crystal chandelier and a ceiling painted  by Marc Chagall in 1964 (it covers the original one painted by Lenepveu in the 19th century).






At the start of the construction, workers discovered a swamp underneath right where the foundations of the edifice were to be laid.  Measures to dry up the swamp proved unsuccessful so a stone tank filled with water was constructed to contain swampy water to rise up through the foundations.  A legend of an underground "lake"inhabited by a strange creature came into being in a 1910  novel by Gaston Leroux which was reprised more recently in the successful musical "Phantom of the Opera " by Andrew Lloyd Weber.

On your next visit to Paris, consider taking a guided tour of the opera house.  English tours run Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday 11:30AM and 2:30M. Of course, attending a ballet or opera performance at the Palais Garnier is truly a memorable experience.

Visit www.enchanted-france.com to plan your next trip to Paris and other regions of France.

tags:#Paris, # Paris opera house , #Palais Garnier, # Haussman,#Charles Garnier, #Phantom of the Opera

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Galleries Lafayette -A Parisian Institution

Most tourists who come to Paris have visited at least once the supreme Parisian department store --Les Galleries Lafayette.  Each year some 25 million visitors visit this temple dedicated to Parisian luxury.






Just before the turn of the 20th century (1893), two cousins from Alsace , Theophile Bader and Alphonse Kahn, opened a  haberdashery store at the corner of rue La Fayette and rue de la Chaussee d'Antin.  The store benefitted from an ideal location, in proximity of the Opera House and the busy St. Lazare rail station.  In 1903, as the result of the initial success of the store, the cousins undertook an extension of retail space  by buying adjacent buildings along the Boulevard Haussman and rue de la Chaussee d'Antin.

In 1912, the store as we know it today, was constructed by architect Ferdinant Chanut and its interior was designed in the style of Art Nouveau with as its landmark the Byzantine-like central colored glass cupola.







Every year, for the holidays, the main hall under the magnificent cupola is lavishly decorated with a Christmas tree and this year it is with an upside down one.


Happy Holidays!!

For a Parisian Christmas holiday visit  www.enchanted-france.com

#Paris, # Galleries Lafayette, # Paris Christmas

Monday, December 8, 2014

The Church of Saint Germain des Pres Celebrates 1000 Years of History

Photo: Enchanted France
At the center of the popular neighborhood  of Saint Germain des Pres sits a church whose history goes back more than a thousand years.  In the 6th century a basilica was  built by Childeric I, son of Clovis and dedicated to the Patron Saint --Vincent.  It was built in Byzantine style and adorned of a copper roof.   Around 750 it was consecrated to  the memory of  the beloved bishop of Paris- Germain.  For many centuries, the basilica was the royal necropolis of the Merovingians kings and queens up until Dagobert was interred in the newly built Saint Denis Basilica.   In 920, Paris was devastated by yet another Viking raid and the church was completely sacked and burnt to the ground.  It took seventy years to consider rebuilding and the task was taken by Abbot Morard who oversaw the  construction  of a new abbey church  from 990 to 1014.




Over the years it grew to become  an enormous benedictine complex whose land and reach extended well beyond the southern bank of the Seine river.   Throughout the centuries the abbey was  renowned as a spiritual  as well as intellectual and artistic center and notably in the Middle Ages, monks at  the abbey excelled in the copying and illuminations of manuscripts. At the Revolution, the abbey was dissolved, many resident monks executed and the church was turned into a saltpeter storehouse which caused much damage to the walls that can still be seen today.  In the 1803, the building was restored back to the Church and in the mid 19th century, a program of restoration was undertaken by architects Godde and Baltar, the latter of the Halles Pavillons' fame who commissioned a number of frescoes and paintings.

Today the  the Church of Saint Germain des Pres sits prettily in the middle of one of the liveliest districts of Paris that attracts locals and tourists far and wide. Its belfry rises up proudly as a witness of  one thousand years of turbulent yet colorful Parisian history.  Hah, if walls could only talk!!

Cafe les Deux Magots facing the Church of Saint Germain des Pres 

For travel to Paris and France's countryside, visit my website www.enchanted-france.com

tags: Paris, Saint Germain des Pres, France