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Coordinates: 48°51′24″N 2°21′8″E

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


This article is about the capital of France. For other uses, see Paris
(disambiguation).

Paris

Capital city, commune, and department


Eiffel Tower and the Seine from Tour Saint-Jacques

Notre-Dame

Sacré-Cœur

Panthéon

Arc de Triomphe
Palais Garnier

The Louvre

Flag

Coat of arms

Motto(s):

Fluctuat nec mergitur


"Tossed by the waves but never sunk"

show
Location of Paris

Paris
Show map of France Show map of Île-de-France (region)

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Coordinates: 48°51′24″N 2°21′8″E

Country France

Region Île-de-France

Department Paris

Intercommunality Métropole du Grand Paris

Subdivisions 20 arrondissements

Government

• Mayor (2020– Anne Hidalgo[1] (PS)


2026)

Area 105.4 km2 (40.7 sq mi)


1

• Urban 2,853.5 km2 (1,101.7 sq mi)

(2020)

• Metro 18,940.7 km2 (7,313.0 sq mi)

(2020)

Population 2,102,650

(2023)[2]

• Rank 9th in Europe


1st in France

• Density 20,000/km2 (52,000/sq mi)

• Urban 10,858,852

(2019[3])

• Urban density 3,800/km2 (9,900/sq mi)


• Metro 13,024,518

(Jan. 2017[4])

• Metro density 690/km2 (1,800/sq mi)

Demonym(s) Parisian(s)
(en) Parisien(s) (masc.), Parisienne(s) (fem.)
(fr), Parigot(s) (masc.), "Parigote(s)" (fem.) (fr,
colloquial)

Time zone UTC+01:00 (CET)

• Summer (DST) UTC+02:00 (CEST)

INSEE/Postal 75056 /75001-75020, 75116


code

Elevation 28–131 m (92–430 ft)


(avg. 78 m or 256 ft)

Website www.paris.fr

1
French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers >
1 km2 (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.

Paris[a] is the capital and most populous city of France. With an official
estimated population of 2,102,650 residents as of 1 January 2023[2] in an area of
more than 105 km2 (41 sq mi),[5] Paris is the fourth-most populated city in
the European Union and the 30th most densely populated city in the world in
2022.[6] Since the 17th century, Paris has been one of the world's major centres
of finance, diplomacy, commerce, culture, fashion, and gastronomy. For its
leading role in the arts and sciences, as well as its early and extensive system
of street lighting, in the 19th century, it became known as the City of Light. [7]
The City of Paris is the centre of the Île-de-France region, or Paris Region, with
an official estimated population of 12,271,794 inhabitants on 1 January 2023, or
about 19% of the population of France.[2] The Paris Region had a GDP of €765
billion (US$1.064 trillion, PPP)[8] in 2021, the highest in the European Union.
[9]
According to the Economist Intelligence Unit Worldwide Cost of Living Survey,
in 2022, Paris was the city with the ninth-highest cost of living in the world.[10]
Paris is a major railway, highway, and air-transport hub served by two
international airports: Charles de Gaulle Airport (the third-busiest airport in
Europe) and Orly Airport.[11][12] Opened in 1900, the city's subway system,
the Paris Métro, serves 5.23 million passengers daily;[13] it is the second-busiest
metro system in Europe after the Moscow Metro. Gare du Nord is the 24th-
busiest railway station in the world and the busiest outside Japan, with
262 million passengers in 2015.[14] Paris has one of the
most sustainable transportation systems[15] and is one of the only two cities in the
world that received the Sustainable Transport Award twice.[16]
Paris is especially known for its museums and architectural landmarks:
the Louvre received 8.9 million visitors in 2023, on track for keeping its position
as the most-visited art museum in the world.[17] The Musée d'Orsay, Musée
Marmottan Monet and Musée de l'Orangerie are noted for their collections of
French Impressionist art. The Pompidou Centre Musée National d'Art
Moderne, Musée Rodin and Musée Picasso are noted for their collections
of modern and contemporary art. The historical district along the Seine in the
city centre has been classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1991.[18]
Paris hosts several United Nations organizations including UNESCO, and other
international organizations such as the OECD, the OECD Development Centre,
the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, the International Energy
Agency, the International Federation for Human Rights, along with European
bodies such as the European Space Agency, the European Banking
Authority and the European Securities and Markets Authority.
The football club Paris Saint-Germain and the rugby union club Stade
Français are based in Paris. The 81,000-seat Stade de France, built for
the 1998 FIFA World Cup, is located just north of Paris in the neighbouring
commune of Saint-Denis. Paris hosts the annual French Open Grand
Slam tennis tournament on the red clay of Roland Garros. The city hosted the
Olympic Games in 1900 and 1924, and will host the 2024 Summer Olympics.
The 1938 and 1998 FIFA World Cups, the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup,
the 2007 Rugby World Cup, as well as the 1960, 1984 and 2016 UEFA
European Championships were also held in the city. Every July, the Tour de
France bicycle race finishes on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées in Paris.
Etymology
See Wiktionary for the name of Paris in various languages other than English
and French.
The ancient oppidum that corresponds to the modern city of Paris was first
mentioned in the mid-1st century BC by Julius Caesar as Luteciam
Parisiorum ('Lutetia of the Parisii'), and is later attested as Parision in the 5th
century AD, then as Paris in 1265.[19][20] During the Roman period, it was
commonly known as Lutetia or Lutecia in Latin, and as Leukotekía in Greek,
which is interpreted as either stemming from the Celtic root *lukot- ('mouse'), or
from *luto- ('marsh, swamp').[21][22][20]
The name Paris is derived from its early inhabitants, the Parisii, a Gallic tribe
from the Iron Age and the Roman period.[23] The meaning of the
Gaulish ethnonym remains debated. According to Xavier Delamarre, it may
derive from the Celtic root pario- ('cauldron').[23] Alfred Holder interpreted the
name as 'the makers' or 'the commanders', by comparing it to
the Welsh peryff ('lord, commander'), both possibly descending from a Proto-
Celtic form reconstructed as *kwar-is-io-.[24] Alternatively, Pierre-Yves
Lambert proposed to translate Parisii as the 'spear people', by connecting the
first element to the Old Irish carr ('spear'), derived from an earlier *kwar-sā.[20] In
any case, the city's name is not related to the Paris of Greek mythology.
Inhabitants are known in English as "Parisians" and in French
as Parisiens ([paʁizjɛ̃] ⓘ). They are also pejoratively called Parigots ([paʁiɡo] ⓘ).
[note 1][25]

History
Main article: History of Paris
For a chronological guide, see Timeline of Paris.
Origins
Main article: Lutetia
The Parisii, a sub-tribe of the Celtic Senones, inhabited the Paris area from
around the middle of the 3rd century BC.[26][27] One of the area's major north–
south trade routes crossed the Seine on the île de la Cité, which gradually
became an important trading centre.[28] The Parisii traded with many river towns
(some as far away as the Iberian Peninsula) and minted their own coins.[29]

Gold coins minted by the Parisii (1st century BC)


The Romans conquered the Paris Basin in 52 BC and began their settlement on
Paris's Left Bank.[30] The Roman town was originally called Lutetia (more
fully, Lutetia Parisiorum, "Lutetia of the Parisii", modern French Lutèce). It
became a prosperous city with a forum, baths, temples, theatres, and
an amphitheatre.[31]
By the end of the Western Roman Empire, the town was known as Parisius,
a Latin name that would later become Paris in French.[32] Christianity was
introduced in the middle of the 3rd century AD by Saint Denis, the first Bishop of
Paris: according to legend, when he refused to renounce his faith before the
Roman occupiers, he was beheaded on the hill which became known as Mons
Martyrum (Latin "Hill of Martyrs"), later "Montmartre", from where he walked
headless to the north of the city; the place where he fell and was buried became
an important religious shrine, the Basilica of Saint-Denis, and many French
kings are buried there.[33]
Clovis the Frank, the first king of the Merovingian dynasty, made the city his
capital from 508.[34] As the Frankish domination of Gaul began, there was a
gradual immigration by the Franks to Paris and the Parisian Francien dialects
were born. Fortification of the Île de la Cité failed to avert sacking by Vikings in
845, but Paris's strategic importance—with its bridges preventing ships from
passing—was established by successful defence in the Siege of Paris (885–
886), for which the then Count of Paris (comte de Paris), Odo of France, was
elected king of West Francia.[35] From the Capetian dynasty that began with the
987 election of Hugh Capet, Count of Paris and Duke of the Franks (duc des
Francs), as king of a unified West Francia, Paris gradually became the largest
and most prosperous city in France.[33]
High and Late Middle Ages to Louis XIV
See also: Paris in the Middle Ages, Paris in the 16th century, and Paris in the
17th century

The Palais de la Cité and Sainte-Chapelle,


viewed from the Left Bank, from the Très Riches Heures du duc de
Berry (month of June) (1410)
By the end of the 12th century, Paris had become the political, economic,
religious, and cultural capital of France.[36] The Palais de la Cité, the royal
residence, was located at the western end of the Île de la Cité. In 1163, during
the reign of Louis VII, Maurice de Sully, bishop of Paris, undertook the
construction of the Notre Dame Cathedral at its eastern extremity.
After the marshland between the river Seine and its slower 'dead arm' to its
north was filled in from around the 10th century,[37] Paris's cultural centre began
to move to the Right Bank. In 1137, a new city marketplace (today's Les Halles)
replaced the two smaller ones on the Île de la Cité and Place de Grève (Place
de l'Hôtel de Ville).[38] The latter location housed the headquarters of Paris's river
trade corporation, an organisation that later became, unofficially (although
formally in later years), Paris's first municipal government.
In the late 12th century, Philip Augustus extended the Louvre fortress to defend
the city against river invasions from the west, gave the city its first walls
between 1190 and 1215, rebuilt its bridges to either side of its central island,
and paved its main thoroughfares.[39] In 1190, he transformed Paris's former
cathedral school into a student-teacher corporation that would become
the University of Paris and would draw students from all of Europe.[40][36]
With 200,000 inhabitants in 1328, Paris, then already the capital of France, was
the most populous city of Europe. By comparison, London in 1300 had 80,000
inhabitants.[41] By the early fourteenth century, so much filth had collected inside
urban Europe that French and Italian cities were naming streets after human
waste. In medieval Paris, several street names were inspired by merde, the
French word for "shit".[42]
The Hôtel de Sens (c. 15th–16th), former
residence of the Archbishop of Sens
During the Hundred Years' War, Paris was occupied by England-
friendly Burgundian forces from 1418, before being occupied outright by the
English when Henry V of England entered the French capital in 1420;[43] in spite
of a 1429 effort by Joan of Arc to liberate the city,[44] it would remain under
English occupation until 1436.
In the late 16th-century French Wars of Religion, Paris was a stronghold of
the Catholic League, the organisers of 24 August 1572 St. Bartholomew's Day
massacre in which thousands of French Protestants were killed.[45][46] The
conflicts ended when pretender to the throne Henry IV, after converting to
Catholicism to gain entry to the capital, entered the city in 1594 to claim the
crown of France. This king made several improvements to the capital during his
reign: he completed the construction of Paris's first uncovered, sidewalk-lined
bridge, the Pont Neuf, built a Louvre extension connecting it to the Tuileries
Palace, and created the first Paris residential square, the Place Royale,
now Place des Vosges. In spite of Henry IV's efforts to improve city circulation,
the narrowness of Paris's streets was a contributing factor in his assassination
near Les Halles marketplace in 1610.[47]
During the 17th century, Cardinal Richelieu, chief minister of Louis XIII, was
determined to make Paris the most beautiful city in Europe. He built five new
bridges, a new chapel for the College of Sorbonne, and a palace for himself,
the Palais-Cardinal. After Richelieu's death in 1642, it was renamed the Palais-
Royal.[48]

Lutetia Parisiorum vulgo Paris, Plan de Paris en


1657, Jan Janssonius
Due to the Parisian uprisings during the Fronde civil war, Louis XIV moved his
court to a new palace, Versailles, in 1682. Although no longer the capital of
France, arts and sciences in the city flourished with the Comédie-Française, the
Academy of Painting, and the French Academy of Sciences. To demonstrate
that the city was safe from attack, the king had the city walls demolished and
replaced with tree-lined boulevards that would become the Grands Boulevards.
[49]
Other marks of his reign were the Collège des Quatre-Nations, the Place
Vendôme, the Place des Victoires, and Les Invalides.[50]
18th and 19th centuries
See also: Paris in the 18th century, Paris during the Second Empire,
and Haussmann's renovation of Paris
Paris grew in population from about 400,000 in 1640, to 650,000 in 1780.[51] A
new boulevard named the Champs-Élysées extended the city west to Étoile,
[52]
while the working-class neighbourhood of the Faubourg Saint-Antoine on the
eastern side of the city grew increasingly crowded with poor migrant workers
from other regions of France.[53]

The storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1789,

by Jean-Pierre Houël The Panthéon, a major


landmark on the Rive Gauche, was completed in 1790.
Paris was the centre of an explosion of philosophic and scientific activity, known
as the Age of Enlightenment. Diderot and D'Alembert published
their Encyclopédie in 1751, before the Montgolfier Brothers launched the first
manned flight in a hot air balloon on 21 November 1783. Paris was the financial
capital of continental Europe, as well the primary European centre for book
publishing, fashion and the manufacture of fine furniture and luxury goods.[54] On
22 October 1797, Paris was also the site of the first parachute jump in history,
by Garnerin.
In the summer of 1789, Paris became the centre stage of the French
Revolution. On 14 July, a mob seized the arsenal at the Invalides, acquiring
thousands of guns, with which it stormed the Bastille, a principal symbol of royal
authority. The first independent Paris Commune, or city council, met in
the Hôtel de Ville and elected a Mayor, the astronomer Jean Sylvain Bailly, on
15 July.[55]
Louis XVI and the royal family were brought to Paris and incarcerated in the
Tuileries Palace. In 1793, as the revolution turned increasingly radical, the king,
queen and mayor were beheaded by guillotine in the Reign of Terror, along with
more than 16,000 others throughout France.[56] The property of the aristocracy
and the church was nationalised, and the city's churches were closed, sold or
demolished.[57] A succession of revolutionary factions ruled Paris
until 9 November 1799 (coup d'état du 18 brumaire), when Napoleon
Bonaparte seized power as First Consul.[58]
The population of Paris had dropped by 100,000 during the Revolution, but after
1799 it surged with 160,000 new residents, reaching 660,000 by 1815.
[59]
Napoleon replaced the elected government of Paris with a prefect that
reported directly to him. He began erecting monuments to military glory,
including the Arc de Triomphe, and improved the neglected infrastructure of the
city with new fountains, the Canal de l'Ourcq, Père Lachaise Cemetery and the
city's first metal bridge, the Pont des Arts.[59]

The Eiffel Tower, under construction in


November 1888, startled Parisians—and the world—with its modernity.
During the Restoration, the bridges and squares of Paris were returned to their
pre-Revolution names; the July Revolution in 1830 (commemorated by the July
Column on the Place de la Bastille) brought to power a constitutional
monarch, Louis Philippe I. The first railway line to Paris opened in 1837,
beginning a new period of massive migration from the provinces to the city.[59] In
1848, Louis-Philippe was overthrown by a popular uprising in the streets of
Paris. His successor, Napoleon III, alongside the newly appointed prefect of the
Seine, Georges-Eugène Haussmann, launched a huge public works project to
build wide new boulevards, a new opera house, a central market, new
aqueducts, sewers and parks, including the Bois de Boulogne and Bois de
Vincennes.[60] In 1860, Napoleon III annexed the surrounding towns and created
eight new arrondissements, expanding Paris to its current limits.[60]
During the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), Paris was besieged by
the Prussian Army. Following several months of blockade, hunger, and then
bombardment by the Prussians, the city was forced to surrender on 28 January
1871. After seizing power in Paris on 28 March, a revolutionary government
known as the Paris Commune held power for two months, before being harshly
suppressed by the French army during the "Bloody Week" at the end of May
1871.[61]
In the late 19th century, Paris hosted two major international expositions:
the 1889 Universal Exposition, which featured the new Eiffel Tower, was held to
mark the centennial of the French Revolution; and the 1900 Universal
Exposition gave Paris the Pont Alexandre III, the Grand Palais, the Petit
Palais and the first Paris Métro line.[62] Paris became the laboratory
of Naturalism (Émile Zola) and Symbolism (Charles Baudelaire and Paul
Verlaine), and of Impressionism in art (Courbet, Manet, Monet, Renoir).[63]
20th and 21st centuries
See also: Paris in the Belle Époque, Paris during the First World War, Paris
between the Wars (1919–1939), Paris in World War II, and History of Paris
(1946–2000)
By 1901, the population of Paris had grown to about 2,715,000.[64] At the
beginning of the century, artists from around the world including Pablo
Picasso, Modigliani, and Henri Matisse made Paris their home. It was the
birthplace of Fauvism, Cubism and abstract art,[65][66] and authors such as Marcel
Proust were exploring new approaches to literature.[67]
During the First World War, Paris sometimes found itself on the front line; 600 to
1,000 Paris taxis played a small but highly important symbolic role in
transporting 6,000 soldiers to the front line at the First Battle of the Marne. The
city was also bombed by Zeppelins and shelled by German long-range guns.
[68]
In the years after the war, known as Les Années Folles, Paris continued to be
a mecca for writers, musicians and artists from around the world,
including Ernest Hemingway, Igor Stravinsky, James Joyce, Josephine
Baker, Eva Kotchever, Henry Miller, Anaïs Nin, Sidney Bechet[69] and Salvador
Dalí.[70]
In the years after the peace conference, the city was also home to growing
numbers of students and activists from French colonies and other Asian and
African countries, who later became leaders of their countries, such as Ho Chi
Minh, Zhou Enlai and Léopold Sédar Senghor.[71]

General Charles de Gaulle on the Champs-


Élysées celebrating the liberation of Paris, 26 August 1944
On 14 June 1940, the German army marched into Paris, which had been
declared an "open city".[72] On 16–17 July 1942, following German orders, the
French police and gendarmes arrested 12,884 Jews, including 4,115 children,
and confined them during five days at the Vel d'Hiv (Vélodrome d'Hiver), from
which they were transported by train to the extermination camp at Auschwitz.
None of the children came back.[73][74] On 25 August 1944, the city was liberated
by the French 2nd Armoured Division and the 4th Infantry Division of the United
States Army. General Charles de Gaulle led a huge and emotional crowd down
the Champs Élysées towards Notre Dame de Paris, and made a rousing
speech from the Hôtel de Ville.[75]
In the 1950s and the 1960s, Paris became one front of the Algerian War for
independence; in August 1961, the pro-independence FLN targeted and killed
11 Paris policemen, leading to the imposition of a curfew on Muslims of Algeria
(who, at that time, were French citizens). On 17 October 1961, an unauthorised
but peaceful protest demonstration of Algerians against the curfew led to violent
confrontations between the police and demonstrators, in which at least 40
people were killed. The anti-independence Organisation armée secrète (OAS)
carried out a series of bombings in Paris throughout 1961 and 1962.[76][77]
In May 1968, protesting students occupied the Sorbonne and put up barricades
in the Latin Quarter. Thousands of Parisian blue-collar workers joined the
students, and the movement grew into a two-week general strike. Supporters of
the government won the June elections by a large majority. The May 1968
events in France resulted in the break-up of the University of Paris into 13
independent campuses.[78] In 1975, the National Assembly changed the status of
Paris to that of other French cities and, on 25 March 1977, Jacques
Chirac became the first elected mayor of Paris since 1793.[79] The Tour Maine-
Montparnasse, the tallest building in the city at 57 storeys and 210 m (689 ft)
high, was built between 1969 and 1973. It was highly controversial, and it
remains the only building in the centre of the city over 32 storeys high.[80] The
population of Paris dropped from 2,850,000 in 1954 to 2,152,000 in 1990, as
middle-class families moved to the suburbs.[81] A suburban railway network,
the RER (Réseau Express Régional), was built to complement the Métro;
the Périphérique expressway encircling the city, was completed in 1973.[82]
Most of the postwar presidents of the Fifth Republic wanted to leave their own
monuments in Paris; President Georges Pompidou started the Centre Georges
Pompidou (1977), Valéry Giscard d'Estaing began the Musée d'Orsay (1986);
President François Mitterrand had the Opéra Bastille built (1985–1989), the new
site of the Bibliothèque nationale de France (1996), the Arche de la
Défense (1985–1989) in La Défense, as well as the Louvre Pyramid with its
underground courtyard (1983–1989); Jacques Chirac (2006), the Musée du
quai Branly.[83]
In the early 21st century, the population of Paris began to increase slowly again,
as more young people moved into the city. It reached 2.25 million in 2011. In
March 2001, Bertrand Delanoë became the first socialist mayor. He was re-
elected in March 2008.[84] In 2007, in an effort to reduce car traffic, he introduced
the Vélib', a system which rents bicycles. Bertrand Delanoë also transformed a
section of the highway along the Left Bank of the Seine into an urban
promenade and park, the Promenade des Berges de la Seine, which he
inaugurated in June 2013.[85]
Demonstrators at the Place de la République,
Paris, 11 January 2015, during the Republican marches after the Charlie
Hebdo shooting
In 2007, President Nicolas Sarkozy launched the Grand Paris project, to
integrate Paris more closely with the towns in the region around it. After many
modifications, the new area, named the Metropolis of Grand Paris, with a
population of 6.7 million, was created on 1 January 2016.[86] In 2011, the City of
Paris and the national government approved the plans for the Grand Paris
Express, totalling 205 km (127 mi) of automated metro lines to connect Paris,
the innermost three departments around Paris, airports and high-speed rail
(TGV) stations, at an estimated cost of €35 billion.[87] The system is scheduled to
be completed by 2030.[88]
In January 2015, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula claimed attacks across the
Paris region.[89][90] 1.5 million people marched in Paris in a show of solidarity
against terrorism and in support of freedom of speech.[91] In November of the
same year, terrorist attacks, claimed by ISIL,[92] killed 130 people and injured
more than 350.[93]
On 22 April 2016, the Paris Agreement was signed by 196 nations of the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in an aim to limit the effects
of climate change below 2 °C.[94]
Geography

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