Redirected from Ile de la Cite
In 52 BC a Celtic tribe, the Parisii[?] lived on that ground.
The island was difficult to attack and therefore a variety of peoples wanted to control it.
In the 12th century, King Louis VII ordered the building of Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral on the island. During the French Revolution and the Paris Commune it was a center of rebellion.
The island is now occupied largely by Notre Dame cathedral and the Palais de Justice[?]. It is connected to the rest of Paris by bridges to both banks of the river and to the Ile Saint-Louis[?]. It has one station on the Paris Metro, "Cité", and the RER station "Saint-Michel-Notre-Dame" on the south bank has an exit on the island in front of the cathedral.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|