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Medieval & Roman Paris

Paris Wine Walks

The focus of this walk remains the wine history of Paris and its hidden vineyards, but without the tastings (except for one celebratory glass at the end). Therefore, it’s perfect for families and kids, or anyone who doesn’t want to combine wine with walking. Join us for an extensive tour through medieval and Roman Paris, uncovering how wine shaped the city and why Gothic architecture exists thanks to wine. We start right at the heart of the city—Île de la Cité and Notre Dame Cathedral—to explore the true origins of the Gothic style and see how wine helped build and restore Notre Dame. Paris has a rich viticultural heritage. One striking example was the now-forgotten Clos de Laas, one of the biggest ‘urban’ vineyards belonging to the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, thriving alongside the River Seine between Saint-Michel Bridge and Rue Dauphine. We wander down narrow lanes towards Hôtel de Cluny and the Gallo-Roman Museum, paying tribute to Paris as a center of knowledge during the Middle Ages while strolling past Université de la Sorbonne and Collège de France. Continuing onward, we pass sites like former vine plots such as Clos Bruneau and remnants of Montmartre Vineyard, whose grapes supplied taverners around Place de la Contrescarpe centuries ago. St-Étienne du Mont Church and Les Invalides each hold fascinating tales just like the vestiges of Philip Augustus Walls and charmingly quirky Rue Mouffetard. Meanwhile, Place de la Contrescarpe may be less known today, yet back then it buzzed with drinkers enjoying glasses of local vintages!

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Vines in Saint-Germain-des-Prés

Paris Wine Walks

This unpretentiously modest vineyard, rooted in the very same earth where medieval wines were born, offers visitors a chance to experience terroir at one of Paris’s oldest and most celebrated neighborhoods. Abbey Saint-Germain-des-Prés once boasted some of Europe’s wealthiest holdings, including extensive vineyards stretching far beyond their walls. The abbey produced staggering quantities of wine for both consumption within its own community and export throughout northern Europe. Paris boasts another tiny vine plot on Place Félix Desruelles—hardly enough rows to call a vineyard but comprising just ten plants of Gamay grape variety sourced directly from the beaujolais hamlet of Julienas. What this little patch lacks in size, however, makes up for it through sheer passion among those who support it and the rich heritage behind these precious few shoots. One of the ten cru villages of Beaujolais, Julienas produces vibrant red fruit flavors thanks to grapes known locally as “black gamay” whose pale sap flows like water after harvest; picked entirely by hand today, they have substance sufficient to age gracefully over five to eight years if cultivated organically under proper conditions. Your tour will include ample tastings paired perfectly alongside seasonal produce found fresh daily at picturesque historical market hall Maréchal Saint Germain – think crisp salads made with local greens or perhaps hearty cheese platters accompanied by crusty loaves baked using traditional methods here amidst cobblestone streets lined with centuries old buildings - truly reminiscent times gone past!

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