The Champs-Elysées is used for all the major
celebrations. This is where Parisians celebrate New
Year's Eve and where the military parades are held on
the 14th of July. Historic national events, like the
Liberation at the end of the second World War or the
victory in
the World Cup football were also celebrated on this wide avenue.
the World Cup football were also celebrated on this wide avenue.
In the 16th century this area was nothing but fields
outside the center of Paris. In 1616 Marie de Medicis
decided to create a long tree-lined path going east
from the Tuileries. The route was redesigned in 1667
by renowned landscape designer André Le Nôtre as an extension of the Jardins des
Tuileries. The promenade, now called 'Grande Allée
du Roule' or 'Grand-Cours' had become a fashionable
place but was still isolated from the city with few
buildings surrounding the area. 27 Years later the promenade
was renamed to 'Champs-Elysées', or Elysian Fields
in English. The name was derived from Greek mythology
where 'Elusia' is a
place where heroes come to relax.
place where heroes come to relax.
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