The Good Life France Magazine




The Good Life France Magazine brings you the best of France - inspirational and exclusive features, fabulous photos, mouth-watering recipes, tips, guides, ideas and much more...


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Issue No. 24

Bringing you the best of France - full length features on Alsace, Bordeaux, Burgundy, Montpellier, Boulogne, Le Havre, the Dordogne, the French Alps and loads more. Delicious recipes, brilliant guides - don't miss this jam-packed issue - it's the next best thing to being there...

Catacombes de Paris Head

Catacombes de Paris Head 20 metres underground to the extraordinary Catacombes de Paris, home to the bones of some 6 million people. Stroll through a macabre maze of dimly lit galleries and narrow passageways in the largest ossuary in the world. In the late 18th century, Louis XVI sanctioned the removal of bones from the city’s cemeteries which were so packed that they were a health hazard. One of them, the cemetery of the Holy Innocents had been in use for 10 centuries. Bones were taken to the site, a former quarry and stacked in the galleries. By 1809 the catacombs were opened to the public for visits and now receive more than half a million people a year. catacombes.paris.fr/ Père-Lachaise Cemetery You might not think this a fun place to visit but it is a beautiful cemetery with walkways made for strolling. Here you’ll find the graves of celebrities like Oscar Wilde, whose tomb is protected from fans keen to kiss the stone which could cause damage, Jim Morrison of The Doors (there have been several claims of his ghost being seen) and Frederic Chopin (though his heart is in a church in Warsaw). In the centre of the cemetery is the impressive mausoleum of Russian baroness Élisabeth Démidoff. According to legend, after she died in 1818, the wealthy, if slightly nutty aristocrat stated in her will that if anyone could spend 366 days locked in her tomb watching over her, they would inherit a fortune. Food and water would be passed to them through a grill and waste removed that way. Apparently many people took up the challenge and no one succeeded. Her tomb has now been sealed up… Traces of a guillotine In 1851 until 1899 a guillotine was placed on the corner of Rue de la Croix-Faubin, near 166 bis Rue de la roquette in front of the Prison Grand Roquette. The dreaded machine was used to behead prisoners. If you go there now, you might notice that in the road are five slabs of stone embedded in the tarmac – this is where the guillotine was installed…

Musée de la préfecture de police Unlike the Crime Museum at Scotland yard in London (AKA the Black Museum) the Paris museum of crime is open to the public. In the 5th arrondissement, the Musée de la Préfecture de Police, on the 3rd floor of the police station retraces the history of criminology from the 17th century to the present. There are 2000 exhibits which reflect a sorry tale of murder, swindles and scams over the centuries. A collection of weapons, photos, official paperwork, and even the peep hole through which serial killer Dr. Petiot watched his victims die in agony. People who’ve visited this museum say it made them shudder! Musée des moulages de l’hôpital Saint-Louis Photo: Ella Crowley The fact that children under the age of 12 can’t enter the Musée des Moulages is a hint that this unusual museum isn’t like the others. It’s home to a unique collection of 4807 medical wax casts. Faces and body parts of captured for eternity in wax clearly revealing their afflictions. Warts, fungus and worse in incredibly lifelike form. This as to be one of the most stomach churning collections in the world. hopital-saintlouis Le Manoir de Paris If you like fun with your scare, you’ll love this walk-though haunted house near the Gare du Nord train station in the 10th Arr. Interactive shows with actors take you on a journey through the house in search of a victim… you’ll meet the Man in the Iron Mask and Quasimodo amongst others. At Halloween, this is one of the most popular places in Paris! www.lemanoirdeparis.fr/

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