The île de la Cité
The Palais de Justice, the Sainte Chapelle, and the Conciergerie
The Cathédrale Notre Dame
The Panthéon and the Quartier Latin
The St. Etienne du Mont Church
The Palais and the Jardin du Luxembourg
The Tour Montparnasse
The St. Germain des Prés Church
The Hôtel and the museum of Cluny
The St. Séverin Church
The St. Julien Le Pauvre Church
The Pont Neuf
The Hôtel de la Monnaie and the Palais de L'Institut
The Palais Bourbon
The Hôtel des Invalides
The Ecole Militaire
The Unesco Palace
The Tour Eiffel
The Arc de Triomphe
The Place de la Concorde
The Madeleine Church
The Théatre de l'Opéra
The Colonne Vendôme
The Théatre Français
The Palais Royal
The Palais du Louvre
The Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel
The St. Germain l'Auxerrois Church
The Tour St. Jacques
The Hôtel de Ville
The Marais
The Palais de Chaillot
Montmartre and the
Basilique du Sacré Coeur
The Panthéon and the quartier latin.

This majestic monument was formely the Eglise Sainte-Geneviève. It was transformed into a necropolis in 1791, to receive Mirabeau's ashes. Other famous men have been buried there since. The proud yet humble motto « Aux grands hommes, La Patrie Reconnaissante » (« To Her Great Men, from Grateful France ») is carved on the pediment.

The inside walls are decorated with a number of frescoes, the history of Sainte-Geneviève by Puvis de Chavannes being the most famous. On the left side of the Place du Panthéon are the law Faculty and the Sainte Geneviève Library.

The Latin Quartier is synonymous with the Boulevard Saint-Michel, which starts from the Place Saint-Michel and crosses the Boulevard Saint-Germain; the BOUL'MICH is the University causeway, and is invariably thronged by students belonging to the various Faculties around.

In the Rue des Ecoles stand the Université de Paris (the Sorbonne) and the College de France, built under Henri IV, where free public lectures are given since the days of Francois 1st The Ecole Polytechnique is in Rue Descartes; in Rue Monge stand the Arènes de Lutèce (the amphithéâtre), which date back to 50 B.C.