Sewer Tour (Paris, France)
Yes, you too can view the magnificent sewers of Paris! Do you suppose I’m sick because I really, really want to go on this tour?
Sewer Tour (Paris, France)
Yes, you too can view the magnificent sewers of Paris! Do you suppose I’m sick because I really, really want to go on this tour?
Pont De L’Alma (Paris, France)
The infamous Parisian street/tunnel where Princess Diana met her untimely demise. Special thanks to Merrie for the suggestion.
Pere Lachaise Cemetery (Paris, France)
The famous Parisian cemetery, chock full of literary luminaries such as Oscar Wilde, Moliere, and, er, Jim Morrison. Also of morbid note, in the eastern corner of the cemetery is the Mur des Fédérés, against which 147 Communards were shot at dawn on 28 May 1871, after their final resistance among the graves the night before. They were buried where they fell against the wall. The official website has a FANTASTIC virtual tour, which is the next best thing to being there. (Special thanks to Merrie for the suggestion.)
Palais Garnier (Paris, France)
Baelish explains why this building is a must-see for the morbidly-minded:

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I’d like to say that I’m disappointed you have the Notre Dame Cathedral listed, but don’t have the fabulously misleading Palais Garnier in Paris, France listed amongst your morbid sights! To the non-franciasophiles, the Palais Garnier is most commonly known as the Paris Opera House. It was built between 1862 and 1875 by French architect Charles Garnier, and is the only theatre in the world to boast being built over thousands of corpses, a brief stint as a prison, a fatal accident involving a falling counterweight, and being the abode of the most famous, and well-traveled, ghost in the world! (Not my site, but there are some phenomenal pictures here: http://www.viennaslide.com/paris/se-0530-23.htm) Theatres are always charged full of spooky energy, especially opera houses where the fantastic and morbid were played out every night in front of a charged audience, and especially old opera houses which add the history of centuries to the already supernatural air. But in addition to being able to catch a ballet here (with any luck you can sit in the exact seat where, in 1896, one of the counterweights for the massive chandelier broke loose and crashed through the ceiling, killing an unfortunate patron), they host tours of the building and on rare occasion have allowed groups down into the labyrinth-like cellars that inspired an author by the name of Gaston Leroux to pen his classic, The Phantom of the Opera, which has been adapted into several movies and a hit musical that has played around the world. Besides being inspired by the building, Leroux was so impressed with it’s macabre splendour that he set his story here as well, giving his Phantom a home in it’s lair-like cellars. Unguided groups aren’t allowed near the basement, and no tourists are allowed past the third cellar because of the high risk of getting lost, or getting caught in a collapse. However, if you did manage to end up in the fifth floor of the cellar, hundreds feet below ground, you would find yourself in a black cavern containing an underground lake. Wander down one of the side passages and you’ll find yourself in the Communards Cellar where, during the 1871 Seige of Paris, the half-finished building was used as a prison and munition storage. Nearly a hundred prisoners were chained to the walls and left alone in the darkness, with just the steady dripping of water and the fear of instant death caused by a too-careless guard around the stores of gunpowder. To this day, you can see initials carved into the walls next to rusted manacles. If you manage to get yourself hopelessly lost you may end up in the catacombs, which are connected to the opera cellars in several places. Get lost down there and you could never be found, as the catacombs are labyrinthian, stretching under most of Paris, and filled to the brim with human skeletons. You can see why this historic, and beautiful, building is truly a morbid sight to see. (Not to mention why I’m a teeny bit enamored with it.) |
More Info:
Opéra national de Paris
Great Buildings Online
Musée Dupuytren (Paris, France)
The French equivalent to America’s Mütter Museum, this is a fascinating museum of unusual, diseased and malformed anatomical specimens. Yes, definitely a Morbid Must-See! Morbid Anatomy has a magnificent photo gallery of the delights to be seen here.
Musée Fragonard (Paris, France)
Honoré Fragonard (1732 – 1799) was an expert in the art of anatomic preparations. His elaborately posed preparations were the forefathers of Gunther von Hagens’ “Body Worlds”. At the Musée Fragonard, you can see all of his surviving work including some creepy looking “Human Fetuses Dancing a Jig”. I am mesmerized.
The Louvre (Paris, France)
Yeah, yeah, yeah – I know what you’re thinking. “What’s so morbid about an art museum?” Well, besides the fact that you can tour the underground moats from the days when the palace was a medieval fortress, art can be pretty damned morbid. And the Louvre houses some great ones like the must-see The Raft of the Medusa as well as a huge assortment of deathbed images and mutilated Jesus’. (Special thanks to Merrie for the suggestion.)
Notre Dame Cathedral (Paris, France)
The gargoyles of Notre Dame are, of course, something special to see! Not that I’ve seen them, of course, since I’m quite a homebody, but I’ve heard it on good faith that it’s “worth the hike up the tower” to see them. And besides that – maybe you’ll run into the Hunchback, and you know that can’t be bad! If you don’t believe me, believe Merrie: “One of the most beautiful gothic cathedrals around. Gargoyles garlore! The setting for Victor Hugo’s ‘The Hunchback of Notre Dame‘.” (Special thanks to Nancy for the suggestion.)
Denfert-Rochereau Ossuary (Paris, France)
Also known as the “Catacombs”: “Far below the city streets of Paris, in the quiet, damp darkness, seven million Parisians lie motionless. Their skeletons, long since dis-interred from the churchyard graves their survivors left them in, are neatly stacked and aligned to form the walls of nearly one kilometer of walking passage.”
Tunnels of Arras (Arras, France)
Mezzaneine recommends this site: “If you ever get a chance to go to Northern France, there’s this town called Arras that has all these 10th Century tunnels under it that we toured. They were originally used for sacrificial rites and stuff (OOOHHH!!!) and were used to hide troops during the wars and the revolution.”