What are the places of interest

Satisfied with the answer rate: 100% Paris Arc de Triomphe (L'arc de Triomphe) is located in the center of Paris Star Square (now known as General Charles de Gaulle Square) in the middle of France to commemorate the defeat of Napoleon in February 1806 in the Battle of Austerlitz Russian and Austrian allied forces and the construction of the 12 avenues in order to the Arc de Triomphe as the center to the four sides of the radiant, majestic, shaped like a starlight! The project was built by the architect Charles H. Schallgren. The project was designed by the architect Charlemagne, the foundation stone was laid in August 1806, which lasted 30 summers and was completed in July 1836, and it is the first time for the construction of the Arc de Triomphe to be completed. Triumphal Arch 49.54 meters high, 44.82 meters wide, 22.21 meters thick. It has a door on all sides, the center of the arch is 14.6 meters wide, the gateway to two high piers for the pillar, the middle of the elevator up and down. In the arched dome above three layers of corridor, the highest layer is the showroom, where the Arc de Triomphe shows a variety of historical artifacts as well as pictures of Napoleon's life story; the second layer of the collection of a variety of French medals, medals; the lowest layer of the Arc de Triomphe's security office and accounting room. Gallery: the gorgeous music of France Eiffel Tower in the center of Paris on the south bank of the Seine River, is the world's first steel structure of the tower, is regarded as the symbol of Paris. Named for the famous French architect Stave Eiffel design and construction. Built in 1887-1889. The tower is more than 300 meters high, weighing 9,000 tons and divided into three levels. The first platform is 57 meters from the ground, with stores and restaurants; the second platform is 115 meters high, with a café; the third platform is 276 meters high, for visitors to see, the bottom of the area of 10,000 square meters, in the third layer of the building structure violently contracted, pointing straight up to the sky. From one side, it looks like the letter "Y" written backwards. The tower consists of more than 1.8 million components and more than 2.5 million rivets. There is an elevator or a walk to the top of the tower. At night, the top of the tower issued by the rotation of the color searchlight light, anti-aircraft collision. Next to the tower stands a rectangular white marble column, on top of which is placed a gilded head of Stave Eiffel. The Louvre (Palais du Louvre) is one of the largest royal palace buildings in France, located in the center of Paris on the right bank of the Seine River, south of the Paris Opera Square. Originally a medieval castle, after the 16th century after a number of alterations, expansion, to the 18th century for the existing scale. Covering an area of about 45 hectares. As early as 1546, King Fran?ois I decided to build a new palace on the basis of the original castle, and then after nine monarchs continued to expand, which lasted more than 300 years, forming a U-shaped magnificent and brilliant palace complex. 1793 August 10, in the overthrow of the monarchy on the anniversary of the French "National Council "decided to open the former palace for the National Museum of Fine Arts; November 18 of the same year, the Louvre Museum officially opened to the public. Its entire project was completed in 1857. In the Louvre mouth-shaped main hall on the west side, stretching out two side halls, the center of the open space to form the Carrousel Square. On the east side of the palace there is a long row of colonnades, and the building is magnificent. Its galleries are 900 feet long and contain a large collection of works by many artists of the seventeenth century and the European Renaissance. The collection amounts to 400,000 pieces. The Louvre Museum of Fine Arts is divided into six main sections: the Museum of Greek and Roman Art; the Museum of Oriental Art; the Museum of Egyptian Art; the Museum of European Medieval, Renaissance and Modern Statuary; and the Museum of Modern Painting. The exhibitions are divided according to different schools, schools of thought and eras. The first floor exhibits sculptures. On the second floor are oil paintings, and on the third floor are drawings and color pastels. In the early 1980s, the French government implemented the "Grand Louvre Project" to expand and restore the Louvre. Notre-Dame de Paris is the most famous medieval Gothic cathedral, known for its size, age and archaeological and architectural value. Conceived by the Bishop of Paris, Maurice de Sully, to combine two earlier Basilican (rectangular) churches into a single cathedral, the foundation stone was laid by Pope Alexander III in 1163, the high altar was consecrated in 1189, the choir stalls, the west fa?ade, and the chancel were completed in 1240, and porticoes, prayer rooms, and other furnishings were built in the following hundred years. The interior plan is 130 x 48 meters, the roof is 35 meters high and the tower is 68 meters high. The spire of the tower was never built. The church was damaged through the ages and had to be restored in the 19th century, but only the three huge round windows still have the stained glass of the 13th century. The flying buttresses at the back of the nave are particularly majestic and beautiful. The Place de la Bastille, a military fortress built from 1369 to 1382, is located on the right bank of the Seine, east of Paris. The word "Bastille" means "castle" in French. The old castle, with its 8 strong fortresses, was built to resist the English invasion and was transformed into a royal prison from 1380 to 1422. The castle covers an area of 2,670 square meters, surrounded by a high and thick stone wall and eight towers over 30 meters high, with a 24-meter wide ditch dug around it and accessed by a drawbridge. As early as in the 16th century, this place began to imprison political prisoners, the French Enlightenment thinker Voltaire was twice imprisoned here. In the minds of the French people, the Bastille has become a symbol of the French feudal dictatorship. 1789 July 3, the people of Paris rose up in revolt, on the 14th, captured the Bastille, opened the prelude to the French Revolution. 1791, the people of Paris demolished the Bastille, built on its former site of the Bastille Square, and demolition of the stone paved to the Seine River on the Pont de la Concorde for the passers-by to trample. In 1830, the French people also built a monument to the martyrs of the July Revolution in the center of the square. This monument is 52 meters high, the monument body is cast in bronze cylinder, known as the "July Cylinder", at the top of the column is a right hand holding up the torch of the golden-winged statue of liberty, the statue of God in his left hand with a broken chain to symbolize the freedom. In front of the prison site stands a sign that reads, "Everybody dance here!" In June 1880, France designated July 14, the day the people of Paris captured the Bastille, as a national holiday. The Pantheon (le Pantheon), located in the Latin Quarter on the left bank of the Seine River in the center of Paris, was completed in 1791 and is a permanent memorial to the famous figures of French history. Originally built as the church of St. Geneviève in the reign of Louis XV, it was nationalized and secularized in 1791 and was converted into a cemetery for the burial of "great men"; it was returned to the Church between 1814 and 1830. The Pantheon's artistic decoration is very beautiful, the large frescoes on its dome were created by the famous painter Antoine Grote, but after the July Revolution of 1830 the theme of the paintings changed and the Pantheon took on a "purely patriotic and national" character. Voltaire, Rousseau, Victor Hugo, émile Zola, Marcelin Bertolo, Jean Jaurès, Berlioz, Malraux and Alexandre Dumas are buried in the Pantheon. As of November 2002,*** 70 people who have made an extraordinary contribution to France have been honored with this distinction. The Centre National d'art et de Culture Georges Pompidou is located in the north side of the Latin Quarter of Paris, on the right bank of the Seine, on the Rue de Beaubourg, which is often referred to simply as "Beaubourg" by the locals. The exterior of the cultural center is lined with steel frames and pipes, and is painted red, yellow, blue, green and white depending on the function. This modern building is also known as the "Refinery" and "Culture Factory" because it resembles a factory. This innovative design, special shape of the modern building is the late President Pompidou in 1969 decided to build, 1972 officially started construction, completed in 1977, opened in February of the same year. The entire building covers an area of 7,500 square meters, construction area **** 100,000 square meters, 6 floors above ground. The whole building *** divided into industrial creation center, public knowledge library, modern art museum and music and sound harmony and research center four parts. >>> Place de la Concorde in Paris (Place de la Concorde in Paris) is located in the center of Paris, on the north bank of the Seine River, is the most famous square in France and one of the most beautiful squares in the world. The square was built in 1757, according to the design of the famous architect Cabriere. Because there was a statue of Louis XV riding in the center of the square, it was named "Louis XV Square" in 1763. During the Revolution, it was renamed "Place de la Révolution", and in 1795 it was renamed "Place de la Concorde", which was later renovated under the auspices of the renowned architect Hittorfer, and finally took on its present dimensions in 1840. In the center of the square stands a 23-meter-high, more than 3,400-year-old Egyptian obelisk, which is Louis-Philippe in 1831 from Luxor, Egypt, the famous cultural relics, the monument body of the ancient text records the deeds of Pharaoh Ramses II. On each side of the monument is a fountain. The exquisite carvings in the fountain are also the work of Hitover. The square is surrounded by eight statues symbolizing the eight cities that played an important role in the history of France: Lyon, Marseille, Bordeaux, Nantes, Rouen, Brest, Lille and Strasbourg, where, during the Revolution of 1793, the people of Paris rose up to destroy the bronze statue of Louis XV and to guillotine Louis XVI. The Avenue des Champs-Elysees (Ave des Champs-Elysees) runs from Place de la Concorde in the east to Place des Stars in the west, with a total length of about 1,800 meters, and a width of about 120 meters at the widest part of the street, making it one of the most distinctive and bustling streets across Paris. In French, "Champs-élysées" means "idyllic paradise". In the 17th century, Louis XIV planted trees in what used to be a low-lying, wet open space, making it a forbidden area for the pleasure of the court nobility. Later on, the east-west axis of the Parc des Tuileries was extended to the west, with a boulevard nearly 1 kilometer long. It was later extended and named Champs Elysées in 1709. The avenue is bounded by the Rue Lombard, which runs north-south, and is divided into two sections, east and west, with very different styles. The quiet eastern section reflects an idyllic landscape, about 700 meters long, with rows of sycamore trees and street gardens hidden among the trees. At the eastern end, the Arc de Triomphe is located in the center of the star-shaped square. Near the main street are the Bourbon Palace and the Cathedral of Madeleine. Here are also Tularey Park, the Louvre, the City Hall and the Elysee Palace and other places of interest. The western section is more than 1,100 meters long, and the Place de la Concorde at the western end is another major transportation hub in Paris. Some of the major festivals in France - July 14 National Day parade, New Year's Eve gala are held on this famous street.