So great to meet up, we had a fab time .
Also to see Paris in the eyes of someone new.
♥ ♥ ♥ Linda of Frenchless in France and I havebeen trying to meet up for ages but it never happeneduntil this year .. Timings were wrong before..
Statue of Georges Danton St-Germain-des-Pres The Statue de Danton, by Auguste Paris was erected in front of Odeon, Paris, in 1889 for the centennial celebration of the French revolution.
Years ago the street names used to be etched into the stone walls .. but that all changed and so did the arrondissements..
Before 1860
On 11 October 1795, Paris was divided into twelve arrondissements. They were numbered from west to east, with numbers 1-9 situated on the Right Bank of the Seine, and 10-12 on the Left Bank.Each arrondissement was subdivided into four quartiers, which corresponded to the 48 original districts created in 1790.
After 1860
On 1 January 1860, new territory was defined to be within the city by Napoleon III. The previous twelve arrondissements were rearranged with this new territory to become the present twenty.
Love the shape !\
We headed to Saint Sulpice , Roman Catholic Church..the second largest church in the city..
Yep!! This is the ceiling !!
What we do to get a great shot.
In 1727 Jean-Baptiste Languet de Gergy, then priest of Saint-Sulpice, requested the construction of a gnomon in the church as part of its new construction, to help him determine the time of the equinoxes and Easter A meridian line of brass was inlaid across the floor and ascending a white marble obelisk, nearly eleven metres high, at the top of which is a sphere surmounted by a cross. The obelisk is dated 1743.
In the south transept window a small opening with a lens was set up, so that a ray of sunlight shines onto the brass line. At noon on the winter solstice (21 December), the ray of light touches the brass line on the obelisk. At noon on the equinoxes (21 March and 21 September), the ray touches an oval plate of copper in the floor near the altar.
Constructed by the English clock-maker and astronomer Henry Sully, the gnomon was also used for various scientific measurements: This rational use may have protected Saint-Sulpice from being destroyed during the French Revolution
This information was taken from the internet ..