Eiffel Tower Paris
Historical Encyclopedia

PARIS: THE CITY OF LIGHT

Center of Revolution, Art, and Egyptology

"Paris is not a city; it is a world." – King Francis I.

From the storms of the French Revolution to the serene halls of the Louvre, Paris has been the forge of modern democracy and the guardian of ancient history. It is a city where an Egyptian obelisk stands at the center of its most famous square, symbolizing a timeless bond between the Nile and the Seine.

Paris, the capital of France, has been a leading global city for art, fashion, gastronomy, and culture since the 17th century. Its history of political revolution—specifically the Revolution of 1789—reshaped the modern world, championing the ideals of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."

Louvre Pyramid and Museum

The Egyptian Connection: Napoleon & Champollion

The modern world's fascination with Ancient Egypt (Egyptomania) largely began in Paris.

Napoleon's Expedition (1798)

When Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Egypt, he brought 160 savants (scholars) with him. Their work culminated in the monumental Description de l'Égypte, a series of publications that detailed the geography, natural history, and monuments of ancient and modern Egypt, founding the field of modern Egyptology.

Jean-François Champollion

In 1822, in Paris, Champollion famously cracked the code of the Rosetta Stone, finally allowing the world to read hieroglyphs. He became the first curator of the Egyptian collection at the Louvre, ensuring Paris would forever be a center for studying Pharaonic history.

The Louvre: A Palace of Arts

Originally a fortress built in the late 12th century, the Louvre was converted into a royal palace and eventually opened as a museum in 1793 during the French Revolution. It is home to the **Department of Egyptian Antiquities**, one of the largest and most significant collections in the world, comprising over 50,000 objects.

Masterpieces of the Egyptian Department

The Luxor Obelisk: An Engineering Marvel

In the center of the Place de la Concorde stands the oldest monument in Paris: the Luxor Obelisk. This 3,300-year-old pink granite monolith originally stood at the entrance of the Luxor Temple.

Architecture: Haussmann and Cairo

The Paris we see today—with its wide boulevards and uniform limestone buildings—is the result of the massive renovation by Baron Haussmann in the 19th century.

This style deeply influenced Khedive Ismail of Egypt. After visiting the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1867, he was determined to transform Cairo into "Paris on the Nile." He hired French landscape architects and planners to design Downtown Cairo (Khedivial Cairo), resulting in the distinct European-style squares and buildings seen near Tahrir Square today.

Timeline of Paris

508 AD: Clovis I makes Paris the capital of the Franks.
1789: Storming of the Bastille; start of the French Revolution.
1798: Napoleon invades Egypt, sparking global Egyptomania.
1822: Champollion deciphers hieroglyphs in Paris.
1836: The Luxor Obelisk is erected in the Place de la Concorde.
1889: The Eiffel Tower is completed for the World's Fair.

Frequently Asked Questions

It was a diplomatic gift from Muhammad Ali Pasha of Egypt to France in 1833, in exchange for a clock tower (which now stands at the Cairo Citadel). The obelisk originally stood at the Luxor Temple.
The Louvre holds tens of thousands of Egyptian artifacts. Key highlights include the Seated Scribe, the Great Sphinx of Tanis, and the Zodiac of Dendera (a bas-relief from the ceiling of the Dendera Temple).
The Louvre Pyramid, designed by I.M. Pei and opened in 1989, is a modern architectural reference to the ancient pyramids of Giza. It serves as the main entrance to the museum, symbolizing the timeless connection between past and present.

From the Nile to the Seine

Discover the deep historical ties between France and Egypt.