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Daylife les
Daylife les









daylife les

Fortunately, the police took pity on a pair of unlucky foreigners and waved us through.įinding a parking space was a nightmare: cars were parked at all conceivable angles in the most unlikely places – on top of roundabouts, for example. Our hotel was on the opposite side of town. We drove off the boat straight into a celebratory procession. The SF should have known better, since he had already lived in France previously. It will be interesting to see if, in this age of belt-tightening, the displays are quite as impressive as in previous years.īefore we lived in France, we had the misfortune to arrive by ferry at Le Havre on the evening of le Quatorze Juillet one year. The crowning event in most villages, like ours, is a dazzling firework display. Sarkozy chose to break with this tradition when he became president.įêtes take place up and down the country today. Under the 5 th Republic, successive presidents have used it as an opportunity to address the French people. It was not until legislation was passed in 1880 that the 14 th July became the national holiday, although no doubt people celebrated it anyway. The rest, as they say, is history and, of course, it was all much more complicated than the brief summary here. The capture of the Bastille sparked off a chain reaction in the provinces, and within a few weeks the former municipal governments had been replaced by a network of revolutionary committees. This fact was glossed over, and the event became a symbol of opposition to royal repression and aristocratic privilege. At the time, however, there were only seven prisoners, no doubt somewhat bemused by this turn of events. The people of Paris, fearing that the army would be used against them, stormed the Bastille Prison – also an arsenal – where political prisoners were held without right of appeal. The army was called out to force the Third Estate into submission, but mass demonstrations in Paris turned into an organised revolt. However, he intended to maintain feudalism, and efforts at compromise foundered on the refusal of the aristocracy to accept its abolition, for which the Third Estate was pressing. In the face of united defiance by the Third Estate, Louis XVI had agreed to rule as a constitutional monarch and to abolish fiscal privileges enjoyed by the other two estates. The events of 14th July 1789 followed the failure to get agreement among the three Estates – nobility, clergy and commoners – about constitutional reforms. It has become symbolic of the birth of the modern French state. This was a big celebration held on 14 th July 1790 to mark the anniversary of the capture of the Bastille the previous year. Nowadays, most people think it refers simply to the storming of the Bastille prison in Paris on 14 th July 1789, but it also commemorates the Fête de la Fédération. The French refer to it either as ‘ le Quatorze-Juillet’ or ‘ la Fête nationale’. The 14 th July is not called Bastille Day in French. Since it falls on a Thursday this year (2011), most French people will take the Friday off as well, known as ‘ faire le pont’ – making the bridge between Thursday and the weekend. More commonly, though, it’s a good excuse for a day off and a party. This is le Quatorze Juillet, when the French formally celebrate republican ideals and French unity. The crowd oohs and ahs at the increasingly elaborate display. Catherine wheels whizz round on the other side of the lake, their fiery, galaxy-like trails reflected in the dark water. Rockets explode in a shower of red and green sparks.











Daylife les