June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
The village clings to a limestone cliff 250 metres above the Coulon Valley. The houses are honey-coloured stone, stacked so tightly that one rooftop serves as the terrace for the house above. Gordes has been a Provence postcard since the 1950s, when artists and writers, including Marc Chagall and Victor Vasarely, settled here. The village […]
Tags: advantageous-location, creative-period, decline-thanks, france, french-resistance, french-sculptor, french-village, german-troops, gordes, industrial-cities, limestone-mountains, marc-chagall, muscat-wine, prehistoric-times, provence, religious-wars, rocky-hills, rocky-outcropping, roman-occupation, souvenir-shops, town, victor-vasarely, village, wine-bars
Categories: France, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
The Grande Cascade de Gavarnie is the highest waterfall in France at 422 metres, and it falls in three stages from the Cirque de Gavarnie, a natural amphitheatre in the Pyrenees carved by glaciers. The waterfall is not a thin stream. It is a broad curtain of water, fed by the meltwater of the Gavarnie […]
Tags: cascade-de-gavarnie, europe, falling-water, france, gav, glaciers, grande-cascade, highest-waterfall, highest-waterfalls, monte-perdido, mountain, mountains, nature, pau, snowmelt, spain, substrate, tallest-waterfall
Categories: France, Nature, Nature, Waterfalls
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
The Ill River wraps around the historic centre of Strasbourg, reflecting half-timbered houses that lean gracefully over the water. Petite France, with its tanners’ houses and flower-lined canals, feels frozen in a past century, yet the massive Gothic cathedral rises from the heart of the city as a reminder of its enduring importance. Strasbourg blends […]
Tags: city, council-of-europe, european-court-of-human-rights, european-parliament, first-glance, first-printing, france, german-city, german-influence, german-name, german-poet, holy-roman-empire, johann-gutenberg, johann-wolfgang-von, johann-wolfgang-von-goethe, local-restaurants, printing-machines, river-rhine, strasbourg, street-names, timbered-houses, trade-routes
Categories: Cities, France, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
The largest castle in the Loire Valley rises from flat marshland like a mirage of white stone and symmetry. Chambord has 440 rooms, 365 fireplaces, and 84 staircases. The centrepiece is Leonardo da Vinci’s double-helix staircase, where two people can descend without ever meeting. The rooftop terrace offers a forest of turrets, chimneys, and sculpted […]
Tags: a-major-tourist-attraction, aesthete, architectural-beauty, architectural-style, castle, chateau, chateau-de-chambord, concrete-shape, france, french-renaissance, imaginative-faculty, italian-architecture, le-chateau-de-chambord, leonardo-da-vinci, moats, philibert-delorme, professional-architects, renaissance-architect, royal-castle, royal-family-members, spacious-rooms, staircases, wall-painting
Categories: Castles, France, Sights, Sights
Updated June 19, 2026 by europeexplored
L Isle sur la Sorgue is a town threaded by canals and waterways, earning it the name Venice of Provence. But this is no imitation of Italy. The town has its own distinct character, rooted in Provencal culture. Water wheels still turn in the Sorgue River, a legacy of the mills that once powered local […]
Tags: 12th-century, 17th-century, anges, assumption-of-the-virgin, assumption-of-the-virgin-mary, baroque-buildings, beautiful-sights, carrara-marble, city, cold-winds, dr-roux, france, handmade-paper, italian-style, lisle-sur-la-sorgue, marshes, medieval-city, picturesque-buildings, picturesque-medieval-town, tower-tour, town, venice-of-provence, water-channels, water-mills, water-wheels
Categories: Cities, France, Sights, Sights, Virtual Travel
Updated June 19, 2026 by europeexplored
Before Paris claimed the title, Tours served as the capital of France. This elegant city on the Loire River still carries that regal bearing. Its historic centre, known as the Vieux Tours, is a maze of half-timbered houses and narrow lanes that have remained unchanged for centuries. The Cathedral of Saint Gatien dominates the skyline […]
Tags: antique-shops, archaeological-collections, basilica, capital-of-france, charming-town, city, craft-guilds, france, loire-river, louis-xi, old-buildings, roman-period, st-gatien, st-julien, stone-bridge, thriving-city, timbered-buildings, time-thanks, tours, town, trendy-restaurants, true-copy, wine-museum, world-war-ii
Categories: Cities, France, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Towers capped with steep slate roofs rise from the forest like something out of a storybook. Pierrefonds Castle, rebuilt in the nineteenth century under the direction of Viollet-le-Duc, stands as a vision of medieval grandeur reimagined for the romantic age. Moats surround the outer walls, and the inner courtyard reveals carved stonework, ornate chimneys, and […]
Tags: 12th-century, 14th-century, canons, castle, chateau-de-pierrefonds, chief-minister, duc, east-of-paris, emperor-napoleon-iii, fairytale-castle, france, french-emperor, french-painter, medieval-knights, middle-ages, military-fortifications, military-strength, old-castle, painter-corot, picturesque-castle, pierrefonds-castle, refurbishment, sight, work-of-destruction
Categories: Castles, France, Sights, Sights, Virtual Travel
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Fifty thousand tons of limestone blocks hold themselves together without mortar. The Pont du Gard spans the Gardon River with three tiers of arches, the tallest reaching nearly fifty metres. It carried water from a spring in Uzès to the city of Nîmes, a distance of fifty kilometres with a gradient of just thirty-four centimetres […]
Tags: ancient-roman-aqueduct, aqueduct, aqueducts, arcades, architectural-gem, bridge-over-the-river, france, life-is-water, liters-of-water, major-tourist-attraction, millimeter, monuments-in-france, pont-du-gard, provence, provence-france, roman-empire, roman-times, southern-france, technical-sight, unesco-world-heritage, unesco-world-heritage-site, working-conditions, world-heritage-site
Categories: France, Sights, Sights, Technical Monuments
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Imagine sleeping under a canopy of stars with no tent fabric blocking the view. The transparent bubble tent offers exactly this experience, combining the thrill of wild camping with the comfort of a fully equipped room. These inflatable structures sit on wooden platforms in secluded clearings, providing a mattress, bedding, and often a private bathroom […]
Tags: accommodation, bubble-tent, bubbles, daily-mail, designer-pierre, dwellings, fingertips, france, french-designer, glass-balls, goldfish, low-energy, maximum-comfort, maximum-interaction, milky-way, nature, parc, recycled-plastics, romantics, roubaix, stephane-dumas, sunrise-and-sunset, tents, wardrobe
Categories: France, Nature, Travelling Tips, Wellness, Relax & Sports
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Fifty-two towers and nearly three kilometres of ramparts encircle the medieval citadel of Carcassonne. The fortress rises above the Aude River with fairy-tale turrets and pointed slate roofs that look as though they belong in a storybook. The inner streets hold stone houses, small squares, and the basilica of Saints Nazarius and Celsus with its […]
Tags: 11th-century, 19th-century, architect, board-game, carcassonne, castle-museum, cathedral-notre-dame, curious-tourists, enthusiastic-players, fragment, france, game-city, intellectual-elite, iron-age, labyrinth, largest-fortress-in-europe, medieval-city-centre, medieval-streets, old-town, reconstructions, roman-city, sight, typical-signs, viollet-le-duc
Categories: Castles, Cities, France, Sights, Sights