A Walk in Paris - Timelapse project, France | Париж, Франция. Достопримечательности Парижа.
Paris can be seen as the most interesting city of Europe and probably even as one of the most amazing city's in the world. People from all over the world travel to Paris to discover and experience this fairy-like city. Paris is the city of love, inspiration, fashion and art. The night scenes of Eiffel tower and the warm atmosphere will make you feel like at home. Paris has a lot of interesting architecture, museums, galleries and shops. A city as Paris is one that everyone should visit and experience.
I invite you to watch my timelapse project video about this beautiful city. In this video journey you will see the main attraction places of Paris from Eifel tower to Gardens of Versailles. The footage for this video was filmed in May 2015, during my vacation.
Please watch in FULLSCREEN and HD for the best quality. Enjoy!
Photographer: Pavel Tenyakov, Assistant: Elijah Tenyakov.
Equipment used:
Canon 70d, Canon 600d, Tokina 11-16, Canon 17-55, Canon 70-200 4L.
Manfrotto tripod 190XPROB. Kenko PRO1 Circular PL.
Music: Grégoire Lourme - A Walk in Paris (gregoirelourme.com)
All of the footages from this video is available to buy on:
Shutterstock - shutterstock.com/video/gallery/tenyakov-3204770/
Pond5 - pond5.com/ru/collections/1018807-paris
Videoblocks - videoblocks.com/portfolio/tenyakov
© Pavel Tenyakov
tenyakov@bk.ru
Eating Paris - Saint Germain Area - Rue de Buci - Tourist Food Street
Eating PARIS Saint Germain, Area Rue de Buci, Tourist Food Street. The best patisserie in the sixth arrondissement...chocolate stack of cream and crispy from Carton was hyper sympa!!! Download our French Menu Glossary App -
Rue de Buci, St Germain, Paris | allthegoodies.com
Rue de Buci and its surroundings in St.Germain, is one of our favorite areas in Paris
Music: One step closer by Aakash Gandhi
Sunday Evening in Saint-Germain-des-Prés
A pleasant Sunday Evening at the end of summer in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood of Paris, France. Saint-Germain-des-Prés is an area at the west end of the Latin Quarter that is famous for its literary life, with its many cafés and restaurants, some of which are famous and once were hangouts for many well known writers. The area also was a center for publishing houses, although most of those have moved to lower-cost headquarters in the suburbs now. Today the area is filled with tourists and Parisians and continues to be a favorite spot for meeting friends, dining, drinking and talking on open sidewalk terraces, and so on. The area is named after the church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, which is one of the oldest in Paris, with some remaining parts dating back as far as the 7th century AD.
There are also many art galleries in the area that are open on Sundays.
This video shows the area around the church and the boulevard Saint-Germain, the rue de Seine, rue de Buci, Odéon area, Cour du Commerce Saint-André, etc.
Saint-Germain-des-Prés is normally hyphenated but I skipped the hyphens in the video because they are so unwieldy.
This video also shows the tiniest park in Paris, the Rue Visconti Garden, at 02:26.
Orchha : petit ville aux dix temples !
Suivez nos aventures en Inde !
Grégoire et Adrien en tour du monde dans le but de soutenir des structures sociales à travers le monde grâce à la vidéo de communication.
Novembre 2016
Site internet : catourneautourdumonde.org
Adresse e-mail : catourneautourdumonde@gmail.com
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Paris From Above
Aerial views of Paris (Tour de France footage)
Music : Circles and Battles - Grégoire Vaillant
Parijs / Paris - Saint-Germain-des-Prés (stadswandeling / walking tour), 11 oktober 2015
Parijs - Stadswandeling Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 11 oktober 2015
Place du Québec, Boulevard Saint-Germain, abdijkerk Sint-Germanus-van-de-Weiden, Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés met café Les Deux Magots, Rue Jacob (met o.a. het huis Jadis Hôtel d'York waarin op 3 september 1783 de definitieve versie van de Amerikaanse Onafhankelijkheidsverklaring werd ondertekend door David Hartley, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay en John Adams, met verderop de bekende banketbakkerij La Durée), Rue Mazarine, Rue Dauphine, Pont Neuf met uitzicht op de Seine en ter afsluiting een foto van de liefdesslotjes (Les Amants du Pont Neuf).
Paris - Saint-Germain-des-Prés walking tour, 11 October 2015
Place du Québec, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Saint-Germain-des-Prés abbey church, Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés with café Les Deux Magots, Rue Jacob (with the Jadis Hotel d'York where on 3 September 1783 the final version of the Declaration of Independence was signed by David Hartley, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay and John Adams; and the famous pastry shop La Durée), Rue Mazarine, Rue Dauphine, the Pont Neuf overlooking the Seine and at the end a photo of so-called love locks (Les Amants du Pont Neuf).
Paris - Visite de Saint-Germain-des-Prés, le 11 octobre 2015
Place du Québec, Boulevard Saint-Germain, Église de Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés avec Les Deux Magots, Rue Jacob (avec la maison Jadis Hôtel d'York, où le 3 Septembre en 1783 la version finale de la Déclaration d'Indépendance a été signée par David Hartley, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay et John Adams; et la célèbre pâtisserie de La Durée), Rue Mazarine, Rue Dauphine, le Pont-Neuf sur la Seine et enfin une photo des cadenas d'amour (Les Amants du Pont-Neuf).
Places to see in ( Chambery - France ) Cathedrale Saint Francois De Sales
Places to see in ( Chambery - France ) Cathedrale Saint Francois De Sales
Chambéry Cathedral is a Roman Catholic church in Chambéry, France. The cathedral is dedicated to Saint François de Sales, and is the seat of the Archbishopric of Chambéry, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, and Tarentaise. The Chambéry Cathedral was established in 1779 as the Bishopric of Chambéry. After gaining the territories of the Bishopric of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and the Archbishopric of Tarentaise in 1801, it was elevated to an archbishopric in 1817. In 1825 Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and Tarentaise were re-created as independent dioceses; in 1966 they were once again added to the Archdiocese of Chambéry, which in 2002 adopted its present name of Archdiocese of Chambéry, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, and Tarentaise.
The building dates from the 15th century, when it was constructed as a Franciscan chapel. The site is very swampy and the building is supported by 30,000 poles. It became the cathedral on the creation of the see in 1779. During the French Revolution it was extensively defaced, and the interior was entirely restored in the early 19th century.
It contains the largest ensemble of trompe l'œil painting in Europe (almost 6,000 m²) by the artists Sevesi and Vicario, as well as a maze almost 35 metres long laid down in 1860-70 and relaid in 1989. The neighbouring local history museum, formerly the Franciscan convent, linked to the cathedral by the cloisters, houses a 12th-century ivory diptych of Byzantine inspiration.
( Chambery - France ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Chambery . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Chambery - France
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Places to see in ( Bourges - France ) Cathedrale St Etienne
Places to see in ( Bourges - France ) Cathedrale St Etienne
Bourges Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Bourges) is a Roman Catholic church located in Bourges, France. The cathedral is dedicated to Saint Stephen and is the seat of the Archbishop of Bourges. It is in the Gothic and Romanesque architectural styles. The site occupied by the present cathedral, in what was once the northeastern corner of the Gallo-Roman walled city, has been the site of the city's main church at least since Carolingian times and probably since the foundation of the bishopric in the 3rd century.
The present Cathedral was built as a replacement for a mid-11th-century structure, traces of which survive in the crypt. The date when construction began is unknown, although a document of 1195 recording expenditure on rebuilding works suggests that construction was already underway by that date. The fact that the east end protrudes beyond the line of the Gallo-Roman walls and that royal permission to demolish those walls was only granted in 1183 shows that work on the foundations cannot have started before that date. The main phase of construction is therefore roughly contemporaneous with Chartres Cathedral (begun 1194), some 200 kilometres (124 miles) to the northwest. As with most Early- and High-Gothic cathedrals, the identity of the architect or master-mason is unknown.
The choir was in use (though not necessarily complete) by 1214 and the nave was finished by 1255. The building was finally consecrated in 1324. Most of the west façade was finished by 1270, though work on the towers proceeded more slowly, partly due to the unfavourable rock strata beneath the site. Structural problems with the South tower led to the building of the adjoining buttress tower in the mid-14th century. The North tower was completed around the end of the 15th century but collapsed in 1506, destroying the Northern portion of the façade in the process. The North tower and its portal were subsequently rebuilt in a more contemporary style.
Bourges Cathedral covers a surface of 5,900 square metres (7,100 sq yd). The cathedral's nave is 15 metres (49 ft) wide by 37 metres (121 ft) high; its arcade is 20 metres (66 ft) high; the inner aisle is 21.3 metres (70 ft) and the outer aisle is 9.3 metres (31 ft) high. The use of flying buttresses was employed to help the structure of the building. However, since this was a fairly new technique, one can easily see the walls were still made quite thick to take the force. Sexpartite vaults are used to span the nave.
Bourges Cathedral is notable for the simplicity of its plan, which did without transepts but which adopted the double-aisled design found in earlier high-status churches such as the Early-Christian basilica of St Peter's in Rome or in Notre Dame de Paris. The double aisles continue without interruption beyond the position of the screen (now largely destroyed though a few fragments are preserved in the crypt) to form a double ambulatory around the choir. The inner aisle has a higher vault than the outer one, while both the central nave and the inner aisle have similar three-part elevations with arcade, triforium and clerestory windows; a design which admits considerably more light than one finds in more conventional double-aisled buildings like Notre-Dame.
Apart from the axial chapel, Bourges Cathedral retains most of its original ambulatory glass, which dates from about 1215 (around the same time as Chartres Cathedral). The glazing programme includes a famous Typological window (similar to examples at Sens and Canterbury), several hagiographic cycles, the story of the Old Testament patriarch, Joseph and symbolic depictions of the Apocalypse and Last Judgement. Other windows show the Passion and three of Christ's parables; the Good Samaritan, the Prodigal Son and the story of Dives and Lazarus. The French art historian Louis Grodecki identified three distinct masters or workshops involved in the glazing, one of whom may also have worked on the windows of Poitiers Cathedral.
( Bourges - France ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Bourges. Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Bourges - France
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Quels sont les meilleurs endroits pour faire de la randonnée au Québec? | Québec Maritime
Au Québec, le Bas-saint-Laurent, la Gaspésie, la Côte-Nord et les Îles de la Madeleine sont de formidables régions pour pratiquer la randonnée!
Pour en savoir plus, découvrez votre billet Les régions du Québec maritime : le paradis des randonneurs! :
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► Le Québec maritime est une fascinante destination qui comprend les 4 régions de l'est du Québec: le Bas-Saint-Laurent, la Gaspésie, la Côte-Nord et les Îles de la Madeleine. Bien qu’aussi différentes les unes des autres, ces régions partagent un atout commun : la mer, avec son vaste territoire bordé par 3000 kilomètres de littoral. Ensemble, elles forment une destination vacances où la nature prend ses aises et où l’environnement est source d’inspiration.
Que vous soyez amateur de plein air, d’aventure, de détente, de culture ou de plaisirs gourmands, que vous souhaitiez observer les baleines, les oiseaux ou les grands cervidés dans leur habitat naturel ou que vous soyez passionné d’histoire et de patrimoine, vous trouverez plaisir à voyager dans les régions du Québec maritime!
Accueillants et généreux, les habitants de nos régions sont impatients de vous faire partager leur culture et leur joie de vivre!
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