Übersicht:
Nutzen Sie ein Kombiticket, um sowohl die Conciergerie als auch die Sainte-Chapelle zu besichtigen. Entdecken Sie die atemberaubende Architektur und berühmte Kulturgeschichte dieser beiden besonderen Orte.
Höhepunkte
- Lernen Sie das mittelalterliche Paris kennen, indem Sie die wunderschöne Conciergerie besichtigen, wo Sie auch die beeindruckende Architektur des Revolutionsgerichts und das Gefängnis, in dem Marie Antoinette eingesperrt gewesen sein soll, sehen können.
- Besuchen Sie die Gräber der Helden der Französischen Revolution und bewundern Sie gotische Gebäude aus dem 14. Jahrhundert, Gefängniszellen und Kerker.
- Bewundern Sie die gotische Architektur und die prächtigen Glasfenster der Sainte-Chapelle aus dem 13. Jahrhundert in Ihrem eigenen Tempo.
- Erfahren Sie mehr über die wertvollen Artefakte und Reliquien, die hier in der Vergangenheit aufbewahrt wurden, darunter die Dornenkrone und das Bildnis von Edessa.
fantastic space highly recommend visiting this first then paying the visit to saint-chapelle after as with your combined tickets it lets you skip the queue into the chapel and as the line was really long the conciergerie is a must for history buffs and pay for the tablet guide as it really helps to imagine how it look
Very small exhibit but was interesting enough. This is where they imprisoned and tried to death Marie Antoinette. I purchased a skip the line ticket combo with Saint Chapelle so it worked out great for the price. Again not a lot to see and if you skipped this exhibit I wouldn’t say it would ruin your trip.
The huge vaulted hall of this imposing medieval complex is always impressive, but only when I chanced to visit during a heat wave did I realise that it's also one of the literally coolest places in Paris to visit without undue cost to the planet in air-conditioning: a full storey below modern ground level, and all built in stone. The present exhibition on the upper floors traces the course of the French Revolution, rather dispassionately without much by way of context. This leaves the bare facts to suggest something less than glorious (more like collective insanity if you only look to the trajectory of violence as one repressive regime replaced another). That in turn only throws the cell and chapel of Marie Antoinette into high relief: those rooms are the more effective for being understated. Tip: go mid-to-late afternoon, buy the combined ticket with the Sainte-Chapelle, visit the Conciergerie first and plan to be in the chapel for the last hour (summer) or last hour of good light (winter), when the crowds in that relatively small space can actually thin to a trickle.