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All France Paris Père Lachaise Cemetery
AO Edited

Père Lachaise Cemetery

France's most famous cemetery, with some of its most curious tombs.

Paris, France

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meelar
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  Simon Jones / Atlas Obscura User
Inside a mausoleum   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
A very beautiful tomb with a creepy engraving inside   User-submitted
Oscar Wilde’s lipstick smeared tomb   User-submitted
Tomb of Étienne-Gaspard Robert, a pioneer in phantasmagoria   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Bas-relief on the tomb of Étienne-Gaspard Robert, a pioneer in phantasmagoria   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Inside a mausoleum   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Père Lachaise in Snow   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Tomb of Abelard and Heloise   Wikimedia
Statue in a mausoleum   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Grave of Felix Faure   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Monument to the dead   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Prayer kneeler in a mausoleum   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Grave of Jim Morrison   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Grave of Lt. Colonel Alexandre Rouille, shaped like a military tent   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Monument to balloonists Joseph Croce-Spinelli and Théodore Sivel   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
Monument to balloonists Joseph Croce-Spinelli and Théodore Sivel   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
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Cramped quarters at Pere Lachaise   mocchiatto / Atlas Obscura User
Particularly creepy crypt with gates long since broken open.   kirstenalana / Atlas Obscura User
  rbenn250 / Atlas Obscura User
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Dead Can Dance’s “Within the Realm of a Dying Sun” (1987) is taken from La tombe de François-Vincent Raspail   HeavenMalone / Atlas Obscura User
MAP   SEANETTA / Atlas Obscura User
Jim Morrison’s Tombstone found in the Père Lachaise Cemetery (5/15/2017)   exploringwithesch / Atlas Obscura User
Jim Morrison’s gravestone (5/15/2017)   exploringwithesch / Atlas Obscura User
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Père Lachaise in snow   Allison / Atlas Obscura User
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A fork in the path at Père Lachaise.   Clayton Parker/CC BY-SA 2.0
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Jim Morrison Grave   Jean-François Gornet from Paris, France, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
An area of Père Lachaise becoming overgrown with natural elements.   kirstenalana / Atlas Obscura User
Père Lachaise has a particularly special beauty in autumn when the leaves on all the trees change.   kirstenalana / Atlas Obscura User
Chopin’s grave   kirstenalana / Atlas Obscura User
Typical directional sign that helps you understand where you are in the cemetery.   kirstenalana / Atlas Obscura User
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  Bronwyn Westmore / Atlas Obscura User
Mr Fucker is buried here. (Honestly!)   Simon Jones / Atlas Obscura User
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The iron fence surrounding Jim Morrisson’s grave   Violeta / Atlas Obscura User
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The headstone of Belgian poet Georges Rodenbach.   Pierre-Yves Beaudouin
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About

Originally established by Napoleon, the cemetery languished in obscurity until its directors conducted an elaborate publicity campaign culminating in their claiming the remains of Molière. After this, citizens clamored to be buried with the stars, so to speak, and demand skyrocketed. Today, the cemetery is home to several notable graves. That of Oscar Wilde is worth visiting; traditionally, devoted fans kiss the grave while wearing lipstick.

Also notable is Jim Morrison, whose grave is a constant source of strife. Routinely, full bottles of Jim Beam, bouquets of roses, and other mementos mori are left as offerings to the singer. The grave itself and the immediate area was once, long ago, strewn with graffiti, but it was cleaned up by Jim's parents in 1994. Sadly, fanatics also used to chip pieces off the concrete liner of the grave prompting the cemetery staff to order the placement of a steel fence around the grave and increase the number of guards watching visitors.

Additionally, vandals have defaced other graves with arrows pointing towards Morrison's. Aside from its famous inhabitants, the cemetery is a landmark simply for its design and atmosphere, and one of France's most interesting sites.

Another interesting crypt is the one of Allan Kardec, considered the father of Spiritism — as compared to Spiritualism — in France. His real name was Hypolyte Leon Denizard Rivail. The pseudonym originated from mediumistic communications. Both the names "Allan" and "Kardec" were said to have been his names in previous incarnations. He is best known for his classic, Le Livre des Esprits (The Spirits' Book), first published in 1856. Within this book is expounded a new theory of human life and destiny. The Spirits' Book is based on trance communications received. The automatic scripts brought forward a thorough and intriguing doctrine of reincarnation.

There's also the tomb of Robertson, the stage name of Étienne-Gaspard Robert, an innovator in phantasmagoria in the late 18th century in Paris, whose monument is decorated with skulls and bas-reliefs showing a crowd being menaced by his illusions of skeletons and ghouls, as well as a hot air balloon ride as Robertson was also an aficionado of early aviation. 

Two balloonists, Joseph Croce-Spinelli and Théodore Sivel, are remembered with a monument that shows them resting hand-in-hand beneath a draped shroud. The two perished on a balloon ascent on April 15, 1875, at around 28,000 feet in an attempt to beat the standing record and experiment with the use of oxygen at such heights. 

Some other tombs of notable people to be seen here are that of Frederic Chopin, Honore de Balzac, Edith Piaf, Miguel Angel Asturias (Guatemalan novelist), Gertrude Stein, Georges Cuvier (famous naturalist), Maria Callas (famous opera singer), Max Ernst (surrealist painter), Marie- Madeleine Fourcade (leader of the WWII French resistance), and Amadeo Modigliani (famous Italian artist).

Related Tags

Cemeteries Catacombs And Crypts

Know Before You Go

The Père Lachaise Metro station is not actually the closest to the cemetery entrance; it is about half a kilometer away. For a closer Metro stop, use the Philippe Auguste stop on line 2. The free map at the main office (near the Philippe Auguste metro) isn't the best guide for the cemetery & is actually fairly difficult to read, lacking the detail to navigate the cemetery's many paths. Many different maps are available online and it probably isn't too hard to find one with more detail. Just outside the cemetery, near the Père Lachaise metro station there are usually vendors that sell better maps than the one at the main office -- for a few euros, you can get a more accurate map & have a souvenir of the trip. As the cemetery is built on a slight hill, the preferred Metro stop is Gambetta, which is two blocks away. One can work one's way downhill, rather than climbing upwards.

The Pere Lachaise metro is one of the closest metros to the cemetery. The cemetery has signs indicating sections and streets so it is necessary to get a map that corresponds to those references. There are posted maps at the various entrances.

Community Contributors

Added By

meelar

Edited By

Martin, myturn21, Molly McBride Jacobson, SEANETTA...

  • Martin
  • myturn21
  • Molly McBride Jacobson
  • SEANETTA
  • Ghislain
  • Monsieur Mictlan
  • Fred Cherrygarden
  • bankercb
  • shalemonds
  • roivico
  • Delireus
  • Allison
  • kirstenalana
  • garycascio
  • Simon Jones
  • Bronwyn Westmore
  • rbenn250
  • Vamsi Krishna
  • Violeta
  • exploringwithesch
  • HeavenMalone
  • ssherwin77
  • simonepuorto
  • Clashfan77
  • mocchiatto
  • superadventuregirl
  • The Alternative Guide
  • ellenuski
  • xPrisjjj

Published

June 17, 2009

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  • Pere Lachaise Cemetery on Wikipedia"><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P%C3%A8re_Lachaise_Cemetery">Pere Lachaise Cemetery on Wikipedia</a>
  • https://violetamatei.com/unusual-things-to-do-in-paris/
  • https://www.durags.fr
Père Lachaise Cemetery
16, rue du Repos
Paris, 75020
France
48.859397, 2.390971
Visit Website
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