Entries from mai 2008
Les deux propriétaires de l’hotel des Academies et des Arts Paris sont Charlotte et Laurent Inchauspe. Ils sont tous les deux basques et seraient ravis d’accueillir plus de clients Basques de passage par Paris.
Si cet hotel vous interesse, n’hésitez pas à nous contacter, vous ne serez pas decu et c’est sur, vous reviendrez.
Hotel des Academies est un hotel basque à Paris.
Catégories : Hotel Basque à Paris
Reserver hotel basque Paris, Les Academies
Le basque est une langue parlée au Pays basque (France et Espagne). 20 000 personnes sont unilingues bascophones. En Espagne, le nombre de locuteurs est de 734 100 (provinces de Biscaye, Álava, Guipúzcoa et de Navarre). En France, il y a plus de 67 200 locuteurs (statistique 2005), principalement dans le département des Pyrénées-Atlantiques. Le basque est aussi parlé dans la diaspora basque.
Le mot basque viendrait du nom d’un peuple antique, les Vascons (à noter qu’en espagnol, basque s’écrit vasco), qui en passant par gascon (adaptation gallo-romaine d’une prononciation germanique Waskon) a finalement donné le nom de la région que nous connaissons comme la Gascogne.
Catégories : Jerome Mesnager Hotel Paris
Basque Hotel Paris
The Basque Country (Basque: Euskal Herria) is a historical region in the western Pyrenees that spans the border between France and Spain, extending down to the coast of the Bay of Biscay. It corresponds more or less –but not exactly– with the homeland of the Basque people and language.
Basques are the least assimilated remnant of the Paleolithic inhabitants of Western Europe (specifically those of the Franco-Cantabrian region). Basque tribes were already mentioned in Roman times by Strabo and Pliny, including the Vascones, the Aquitani and others. There is enough evidence that they already spoke Basque in that time (see Aquitanian language and Iruña-Veleia). All other tribes in the Iberian Peninsula were linguistically and culturally assimilated by the end of the Roman period. The Basques had also been greatly influenced by Roman culture and language and might have become fully assimilated in a few hundred years had the Roman world not collapsed.
Catégories : Saint Germain des Pres Artist and Art Hotel
Luxembourg garden hotel Les Academies
Like its counterpart Montmartre, Montparnasse became famous at the beginning of the 20th century, referred to as les Années Folles (the Crazy Years), when it was the heart of intellectual and artistic life in Paris. Between 1921 and 1924, the number of Americans in Paris swelled from 6,000 to 30,000. From 1910 to the start of World War II, Paris’ artistic circles migrated to Montparnasse, an alternative to the Montmartre district which had been the intellectual breeding ground for the previous generation of artists. The Paris of Zola, Manet, France, Degas, Fauré, a group that had assembled more on the basis of status affinity than actual artistic tastes, indulging in the refinements of Dandyism, was at the opposite end of the economic, social, and political spectrum from the gritty, tough-talking, die-hard, emigrant artists that peopled Montmartre.

Catégories : Montparnasse Artist Hotel Paris