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I love touring Paris so much that I am doing a series on both the well known and the rarely visited tourist attractions of Paris's twenty arrondissements (districts). This article visits the eleventh arrondissement in eastern Paris. We suggest French wine and food to increase your touring pleasure.
The eleventh arrondissement of eastern Paris sits on the Right Bank of the Seine River. Packing one hundred fifty thousand residents into slightly more than 1.4 square miles (less than 3.7 square kilometers) it is the most densely populated district of Paris and in fact the most densely populated urban district in Europe. The area hosts over seventy thousand jobs.
This district has become bohemian and trendy, perhaps because other bohemian, trendy districts have priced themselves outside the stratosphere. The eleventh arrondissement is home to a lot of nightlife. And there is a lot of day life as well, restaurants, cafes, boutiques, and galleries.
The Cirque d’hiver (Winter Circus) has been around for more than 150 years. It’s a unique looking building with twenty sides festooned with large columns at the angles. This building has long been a circus. It has also been a concert hall and even one of the first Parisian cinemas. The owners rent it out for almost any purpose. There is a single stage-circus ring and happily no pillars or other obstructions to ruin the view of well over fifteen hundred spectators. In the old days the building contained many more seats but the fire marshals intervened and voila. A swimming pool under the circus ring makes for some very fine water shows. The Cirque d’Hiver was highlighted in a famous Seurat painting, and featured in a celebrated Avedon fashion photograph, and the 1950s movie “Trapeze”, starring Gina Lollobrigida, Tony Curtis, and Kirk Douglas.
The ESCP-EAP European School of Management is a top ranking international business school. It has campuses in Paris and four other major European cities. It offers advanced degrees in Management, European Business, specialized masters degrees, and a PhD in Management Science. This institution was founded in 2000 in the merger of the Ecole Superieure de Commerce de Paris and the Ecole Europeenne des Affaires. The former establishment was founded in 1819. It is the world’s oldest institution dedicated to business and finance teaching. The latter establishment was founded in 1973 as a trans-national elite business school. The goal of the merged institution is to train managers who can adapt to any culture and work in any country, as summed up in its slogan “Learn everywhere, Manage anywhere”.
Of course you don’t want to visit Paris without sampling fine French wine and food. In my article I Love French Wine and Food - A Languedoc-Roussillon Pinot Noir I reviewed such a wine and suggested a sample menu: Start with Gambas (Prawns). For your second course try the Loup en Papillote (Sea Bass cooked in Foil). For dessert indulge yourself with Peches a la Minervoise (White Peaches with Muscat Wine and Raisins). Your Parisian sommelier (wine steward) will be happy to suggest appropriate wines to accompany each course.