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FromParis - Panoramas, panoramic views, images bank, photographs, Quicktime VR, 360°, free ecards and free screensavers from Paris

FromParis - Panoramas, panoramic views, images bank, photographs, Quicktime VR, 360°, free ecards and free screensavers from Paris

Image Stitching Software Online Tours Go to content Go to navigation Go to search Change language Accessibility Support the Louvre Home>Collection & Louvre Palace>Online Tours Online Tours Visit the museum's exhibition rooms and galleries, contemplate the façades of the Louvre... Items per page:5 -10 -15 Sort by: Publication date - Title Egyptian Antiquities Collections from the Pharaonic period are displayed on the east side of the Sully wing, on the ground floor and 1st floor. Egyptian Antiquities Launch virtual tour Remains of the Louvre's Moat The Louvre was originally a fortress built by the French king Philippe Auguste. Medieval Louvre Launch virtual tour Galerie d'Apollon The Galerie d'Apollon, situated above the Petite Galerie, was destroyed by fire in 1661 and rebuilt by Le Vau. Decorative Arts Launch virtual tour Practical information The Louvre is open every day (except Tuesday) from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Night opening until 9:45 p.m. on Wednesdays and Fridays Closed on the following holidays: January 1, May 1, December 25 Buy tickets

PANORAMAFOTOS. ALLES AUF EINMAL SEHEN. UND NOCH EIN WENIG MEHR. Paris, France France is one of the most famous countries in Europe, and Paris is probably the most famous city in the world. Paris is rightfully called "the city of light". It is not because of its extensive illumination — otherwise any major city would claim the title — but because the capital of France has been a center of education, arts and philosophy for many centuries. The word "Paris" originated from Latin "Civitas Parisiorum" and means "the city of Parisia", a Celtic settlement on Cite Island (Ile de la Cité). Paris has not always been the magnificent city. Each Paris landmark has its own story that would take pages and pages! Notre Dame de Paris is another example. Louvre is one of the largest museums in the world. By the way, modern city of Paris was designed for war or, to be exact, for its "strategic purposes", as Napoleon III put it. "Paris is a holiday, which is always with you!" We invite you to look at the capital of France from the bird's eye view.

Home Page Paris - Virtual Tour, Map - France - Arounder - FRANCK CHAREL - PHOTOGRAPHIES PANORAMIQUES 360 DEGRÉS - chansons françaises :: chapitre préliminaire If you have studied French before, what are the main things you remember? Foux da fafa is by a group from New Zealand called Flight of the Conchords. The song is a parody on words and expressions that students typically learn in introductory French courses. As you listen, see how much of the song you are already able to understand. Note: the members of this group are not native French speakers, so their grammar and pronunciation are not always correct! Flight of the Conchords is a folk, pop, and comedy band that bills itself as "formerly New Zealand's fourth most popular guitar-based digi-bongo acapella-rap-funk comedy folk duo." The duo's comedy and music became the basis of a BBC radio series and then, an American television series, which premiered in 2007 on HBO.

British Panoramics Home Page Acadians - History, Settlement patterns, Internal migration, Camps, Acculturation and Assimilation Overview Acadians are the descendants of a group of French-speaking settlers who migrated from coastal France in the late sixteenth century to establish a French colony called Acadia in the maritime provinces of Canada and part of what is now the state of Maine. Forced out by the British in the mid-sixteenth century, a few settlers remained in Maine, but most resettled in southern Louisiana and are popularly known as Cajuns. Before 1713, Acadia was a French colony pioneered mostly by settlers from the coastal provinces of Brittany, Normandy, Picardy, and Poitou—a region that suffered great hardships in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. In 1628, famine and plague followed the end of a series of religious wars between Catholics and Protestants. The early French settlers called themselves "Acadiens" or "Cadiens" (which eventually became Anglicized as "Cajuns") and were among the first Old World settlers to identify themselves as North Americans. rebuilt them.

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