Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station in Marseille France
The Virtual Tourist walks around Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station in Marseille France
Marseille - Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station in Marseille France
The Virtual Tourist walks around Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station in Marseille France
Marseille - Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station South of France
The Virtual Tourist walks around Notre Dame du Mont Metro Station in Marseille France
notre dame du mont a Marseille
lieux de fête sur Marseille a a place notre dame du mont 13006
PLACE NOTRE DAME DU MONT A MARSEILLE 13006
LIEUX DE FÊTE SUR MARSEILLE DANS LE 06 ARRONDISSEMENT A 2 STATION DE LA GARE DE ST CHARLE
Cantonales: le canton de Notre-Dame-du-Mont (Marseille)
Focus sur le canton de Notre-Dame-du-Mont où l'on dénombre pas moins de 10 candidatures
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MuLekEtu - Marseille (notre dame du mont)
MuLekEtu - Marseille (notre dame du mont) concert live
Le Bloco Mulêketú :
Le samba-reggae résonne ici parmi un répertoire métissé interprété tambour battant, comme une invitation à un voyage virevoltant parmi un paysage rythmique coloré : samba, afro, comparsa, maracatú, funk, afoxé, joignent leurs influences urbaines sur une même partition, dans un spectacle s'adaptant à la rue comme à la scène.
Mulêketú vous transporte avec énergie et sensualité dans le ballet chaloupé de ses percussions mobiles : une performance chorégraphiée où rythme et danse ne font qu'un.
Vos oreilles vont en prendre plein les yeux !
MARSEILLE +NOTRE DAME DU MONT + LE STADE BOULEDROME ????????????
Liker abonner vous et partager
Steps To Cours Julien Marseille France
Marseille travel:
Steps To Cours Julien Marseille France
Any visit to Marseille, France should definitely include a stop at the steps of the Cours Julien. It is wall to wall of graffiti or street art and it's impressive. You can take Metro Line 2 and get off at Notre Dame du Mont and just get out and take it all in. This is shot in late December 2013 just before Christmas.
We would walk from the Mama Shelter Hotel through Cours Julien and take the steps down and walk down to the Vieux Port or the main shopping areas of Marseille. It was very colorful and fun.
Places to see in ( Marseille - France )
Places to see in ( Marseille - France )
Marseille, a port city in southern France, has been a crossroads of immigration and trade since its founding by the Greeks circa 600 B.C. At its heart is the Vieux-Port (Old Port), where fishmongers sell their catch along the boat-lined quay. Basilique Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde is a Romanesque-Byzantine church. Modern landmarks include Le Corbusier’s influential Cité Radieuse complex and Zaha Hadid’s CMA CGM Tower.
For many years, the busy port city of Marseille has suffered from a serious image problem. Dismissed for its down-at-heel reputation, urban decay and often alarming crime statistics, it's long been the black sheep of the Provençal coastline. But while it’s gritty, and not always pretty – Cannes or St-Tropez, it’s not – Marseille is a dynamic, edgy, bustling city that’s rich with more than 1500 years of history. And since its stint as the European Capital of Culture in 2013 and the addition of a brace of swanky new museums, the city has sparkled with a new sense of optimism and self-belief. At long last, everyone seems to be waking up to the fact that France’s second-biggest city might have been unfairly maligned all along.
The heart of the city is the vibrant Vieux Port (old port), mast-to-mast with yachts and pleasure boats. Just uphill is the ancient Le Panier neighbourhood, the oldest section of the city. Also worth an explore is the République quarter, with its stylish boutiques and Haussmannian buildings, and the Joliette area, centred onMarseille’s famous striped Cathédrale de la Major.
Marseille has a complex history. It was founded by the Phoceans (from the Greek city of Phocaea, now Foça, in modern Turkey) in 600BC and is one of the oldest cities in Europe. The town is a far cry from the Cézanne paintings and Provençal clichés of sleepy villages, pétanque players and Marcel Pagnol novels. With around one million inhabitants, Marseille is the second largest city in France in terms of population and the largest in terms of area. Its population is a real melting pot of different cultures. It is also said that there are more Comorian people in Marseille than in the Comoros! Indeed, the people of Marseille have varying ethnic backgrounds, with a lot of Italians and Spanish having immigrated to the area after the second world war.
For people not afraid to discover a real place with real people, Marseille is the place. From colourful markets (like Noailles market) that will make you feel like you are in Africa, to the Calanques (a natural area of big cliffs falling into the sea - Calanque means fjord), from the Panier area (the oldest place of the town and historically the place where newcomers installed) to the Vieux-Port (old harbor) and the Corniche (a road along the sea) Marseille has definitely a lot to offer. Forget the Canebière, forget the savon de Marseille (Marseille soap), forget the clichés, and just have a ride from l'Estaque to Les Goudes. You will not forget it.
Alot to see in Marseille such as :
le Vieux Port (old harbour)
Le Panier
a Major gigantic cathedral on the coast
MuCEM
Musée d'Archéologie méditerranéenne
Musée des Docks romains
Notre Dame de la Garde
Noailles
le Cours Julien and la plaine.
Boulevard Longchamp and Palais Longchamp
la Corniche
Vallon des Auffes
Parc Borély
Unité d'Habitation
Stade Velodrome
Mazargues War Cemetry
The Calanques
The Château d'If
L'Estaque and côte bleue
Allauch and Plan de Cuques
The festival Avec le Temps
Le FDAmM or Festival de Danse et des Arts Multiples de Marseille
Le festival du Plateau
La Foire aux Santons
La Fiesta Des Suds
( Marseille - France ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Marseille . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Marseille - France
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Our Lady of the Guard, Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France, Europe
Notre-Dame de la Garde (literally Our Lady of the Guard), is a Catholic basilica in Marseille, France. This Neo-Byzantine church was built by the architect Henri-Jacques Espérandieu on the foundations of an ancient fort located at the highest natural point in Marseille, a 149 m (490 ft) limestone outcrop on the south side of the Old Port. It is a major local landmark and the site of a popular annual pilgrimage every year on Assumption Day, August 15. The basilica was consecrated on June 5, 1864, replacing a church of the same name built in 1214 and restored in the 15th century. The present basilica was constructed on the foundations of a 16th-century fort built by Francis I of France to resist the 1536 siege of Marseille by the Emperor Charles V. It consists of a lower church or crypt in the Romanesque style, carved from the rock, and an upper church of Neo-Byzantine style decorated with mosaics. A square 41m bell tower (135 ft) topped by a 12.5m belfry(42 ft) supports a monumental 11.2 m (27 ft) statue of the Madonna and Child made of copper gilded with gold leaf. The green limestone from the Florence area that was used to build the basilica was discovered to be sensitive to atmospheric corrosion. An extensive restoration took place from 2001 to 2008, including work on mosaics damaged by candle smoke and the impact of bullets during the Liberation of France at the end of World War II.
People from Marseille traditionally see Notre-Dame de la Garde as the guardian and the protector of the city. Local inhabitants commonly refer to it as la bonne mère (the good mother). The Bay of Marseille opens west to the sea. It is bordered by hills the Massif de l'Étoile and the Nerthe to the north, those of Sainte-Baume to the east, and the Carpiagne and the Massif de Marseilleveyre to the south. In the middle of this broad depression a cretaceous limestone peak rises to a height of 162 metres with the basilica at its summit. Due to its height and closeness to the coast, the hill became an important stronghold and observation and lookout point, as well as a landmark for shipping. In 1302, Charles II of Anjou ordered one of his ministers to set beacons along the Mediterranean coast of Provence. One of these beacon sites was the hill of Notre-Dame du Gard. In 1214 maître Pierre, a Marseille priest, was inspired to build a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary on the hill known as La Garde, which belonged to the abbey of Saint-Victor. The abbot granted him permission to plant vines, to cultivate a garden there and to build a chapel. The chapel was completed four years later, and appears in a June 18, 1218 papal bull by Pope Honorius III listing the possessions of the abbey. After maître Pierre died in 1256, Notre-Dame de la Garde became a priory. The prior of the sanctuary was also one of four claustral priors of Saint-Victor. From the time the chapel was founded, surviving wills show bequeaths in its favour. Also, sailors who escaped a shipwreck had been giving thanks and depositing ex-votos at Notre-Dame of the Sea in the church of Notre-Dame-du-Mont. Towards the end of the 16th century they began going to Notre-Dame de la Garde instead. The first chapel was replaced at the beginning of the 15th century by a larger building with a richly equipped chapel dedicated to Saint Gabriel. The rebuilding of the bell tower in 1843 was accompanied by the purchase of not just a new bell but a great bell commissioned from the Lyons foundery of Gédéon Morel thanks to a special collection among the faithful. It was cast on February 11, 1845 and arrived in Marseille on September 19, 1845. It was placed in Jean-Jaurès square and blessed on Sunday October 5, 1845 by Eugène de Mazenod and baptized “Marie Joséphine”. The bell's godfather was André-Élisée Reynard then mayor of Marseilles and the godmother the wife of shipping magnate Wulfran Puget, née Canaple. Their names are engraved on the bell. On October 7, the bell, which weighed 8,234 kilograms (18,153 lb) was placed on a harnessed carriage of sixteen horses. It descended by Thiers Street, Leon Gambetta Alley, the Rue Tapis-Vert, the Cours Belsunce, Canebière, the Rue Paradis, and the Cours Pierre-Puget. Ten horses were added there to the convoy, bringing their number to twenty-six. On 8 October 1845 the ascent of the bell up the hill began with the help of capstans and continued until Friday October 10, when the bell arrived at the summit. The bell was set up on Wednesday October 15. It rang out its first notes on December 8, day of the Immaculate Conception.
[Marseille] MPM 76 - ND du Mont (Cours Julien)
Croisement de MPM 76 de la ligne 2, à la station Notre-Dame du Mont (Cours Julien) à Marseille.
Marseille, France
A visit to Marseille, a port city in southern France. From the Basilica Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde we have a spectacular view of Marseille.
the Crypte-Notre Dame de la Garde ,Marseille , France
The so called Crypte is at the base of the Notre Dame de Garde in Marseille m France . Part of Mass service can be seen
Marseille, audition du marché 14 février 2017 à Notre-Dame du Mont
Quelques extraits sonores de l'audition du marché du 14 février 2017 par Stéphane Catalanotti à l'orgue Ducroquet de Notre-Dame du Mont, à Marseille
marseille - notre dame de la garde
Marseille
Au Cours Julien - Notre Dame du Mont
à Marseille, un quartier très sympa dans le Centre ville.
Descente du Mont Puget (Calanques de Luminy - Marseille)
La descente de cette montagne dans les collines de Provence, se fait en suivant les pierriers : éboullis instable qui roulent.
Le seul moyen de ne pas glisser est de descendre le plus vite possible.
Musique : Vladimir Cosma, la gloire de mon père (échantillon).
Site officiel : Totestebine :
Réalisation : Luminy Productions
MARSEILLE France Des calanques de l'est à la bonne-mêre
Une grande balade dans Marseille qui ne fera partir de l'extrémité sud de la ville dans les calanques pour arriver à notre dame de la garde, en passant par les plages du prado, la cité radieuse ou MAM, la corniche Kennedy...
A tour of Marseille (inclusive of Notre-Dame de la Garde and Frioul Archipelago), France GoPro 1080p
Marseille is the second-largest city in France after Paris and the centre of the third-largest metropolitan area in France after Paris and Lyon. To the east, starting in the small fishing village of Callelongue on the outskirts of Marseille and stretching as far as Cassis, are the Calanques, a rugged coastal area interspersed with small fjord-like inlets. Farther east still are the Sainte-Baume (a 1,147 m [3,763 ft]) mountain ridge rising from a forest of deciduous trees), the city of Toulon and the French Riviera. To the north of Marseille, beyond the low Garlaban and Etoile mountain ranges, is the 1,011 m (3,317 ft) Mont Sainte Victoire. To the west of Marseille is the former artists' colony of l'Estaque; farther west are the Côte Bleue, the Gulf of Lion and the Camargue region in the Rhône delta. The airport lies to the north west of the city at Marignane on the Étang de Berre; Marseille, France. Shots were taken with GoPro Hero 7 Black 2.7K downsized to 1080p HD.