Wednesday, December 10, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Paris Catacombs, 'Empire Of Death,' Open At Night Just In Time For Halloween

The Canadian Press , 15 Oct, 2014 10:45 AM
    PARIS - As if visiting the Paris Catacombs in the daytime wasn't creepy enough — you can now visit the underground maze of skeletons after nightfall, too. That is if you dare defy the warning at the entrance: "Stop, this is the empire of Death."
     
    The subterranean tunnels, stretching 2 kilometres (1.2 miles), cradle the bones of some 6 million Parisians from centuries past and once gave refuge to smugglers.
     
    Twenty meters (66 feet) beneath the French capital's medieval streets, labyrinthine walls of bones and skulls bring visitors into the city of the dead, in a spooky atmosphere that attracts history enthusiasts as well as visitors looking for a chilling place to celebrate Halloween.
     
    The site used to close at 5 p.m., but is now staying open until 8 p.m. The change is mainly aimed at allowing more people to visit and reducing long lines, but it also adds to the thrill: entering and leaving the catacombs after dark feels different from doing it in daylight.
     
    Human remains started to be transferred to the former underground quarries of Paris in 1786, when the main cemetery of Paris —the Cemetery of Innocents — was closed for public health reasons. From 1809 on, the catacombs were rearranged into organized galleries, with piled bones forming walls and pillars, and even some artistic shapes made of femurs and skulls.
     
    Sacred and profane maxims and poems are posted around the galleries, such as: "Think in the morning that perhaps you won't survive until evening, and in the evening that perhaps you won't survive until morning."
     
    Valerie Guillaume, director of the Catacombs, stressed the philosophical nature of the unusual tourist site.
     
    "The place was not conceived to be a horror place, but as a reflection on the meaning of life and death," she said.
     
    Sylvie Robin, the Catacombs' curator, described the extensive smuggling that went on in the tunnels in the past and contributed to its scary reputation.
     
    "That's the origin of all the legends," she said, because the smugglers used to scare the Parisians with lights and noises, so that no one would come and see what they were doing.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    What makes you a pessimist?

    What makes you a pessimist?
     Cannot see thing turning out to be all right? A hyperactive habenula, half the size of a pea in the brain that tracks predictions about negative....

    What makes you a pessimist?

    Device that scans your drink for safety

    Device that scans your drink for safety
    Next time you go to a party in a bar, do not hesitate if someone offers you a drink. Just dip this little stick clandestinely in the glass and get to know if the drink is spiked or not...

    Device that scans your drink for safety

    Nostalgia prompts people to spend more

    Nostalgia prompts people to spend more
    The next time you visit a mall, stop thinking about the past because a feeling of nostalgia may prompt you to spend more, says a study...

    Nostalgia prompts people to spend more

    Early reading skills make kids sharper

    Early reading skills make kids sharper
    If you wish to see your kids emerge as intelligent adults, start now to mind their reading skills. Researchers have found that early reading skills might positively...

    Early reading skills make kids sharper

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Buy books, happiness will come free
    Purchasing books, video games or other experiential products designed to enhance your buying experience can make you just as happy as travelling...

    Buy books, happiness will come free

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk
    Take heart and show some humility if your wife is more educated than you and earns better. With changing times, this may not drive your relationship to the dead end any more....

    Well-educated wives no longer at divorce risk