- 14.5 million visitors.
- The Louvre, Paris 8.3 million visitors (photo right)
- The Eiffel Tower Paris 6.8 million visitors
- The Georges Pompidou centre and museum of art, Paris 5.5 million visitors
- Château de Versailles, near Paris 5.3 million visitors
- Orsay museum of the 19th century Paris 3.2 million visitors
- La Villette science museum, Paris 3 million visitors
- Pompidou Centre (Modern art museum) 2.6 million visitors
- Parc Astérix - Parc Astérix theme park Plailly north of Paris 1.6 million visitors
- Futuroscope theme park, Poitiers 1.6 million visitors
- Arc de Triomphe, Paris 1.5 million visitors
- Natural history museum, Paris 1.4 million visitors
- Mont Saint-Michel, Brittany 1.2 million visitors
- Puy du Fou theme park Vendée 1.2 million visitors
- Musée de l'Armée, Paris 1.2 million visitors
- Lille zoo, Lille 1.0 million visitors
- Musée Carnavalet, Paris 900,000 visitors
- Sainte Chapelle, Paris 900,000 visitors
- Aquarium, La Rochelle 800,000 visitors
- Mer de Glace rack-and-pinion railway, Chamonix, Alps 800,000 visitors
- La Palmyre zoo, Charente Maritime 700,000 visitors
- Musée Grévin waxworks, Paris 700,000 visitors
- Château de Chambord, Loire Valley 700,000 visitors
- Boat trip round old Strasbourg 700,000 visitors
Click here for the best art galleries and museums in France
Click here for the best towns and cities to visit in France
Click here for a guide to historic monuments in France
France's natural environment :
France boasts the most varied natural environment of any country in Europe; it varies from the lush agricultural countryside of Normandy and Brittany, or the rolling prairies of Champagne or Beauce, to Alpine peaks, northern spruce forests, the dry hinterland of Provence, the steppe-like plateaux of the Causses, not to mention a very varied coastline including the North Sea, the Channel, the Atlantic ocean and the Mediterranean.
It would take an encyclopaedia to make an exhaustive list of all the natural tourist sites, and the thousands of natural attractions in France. The country has six National Parks, 43 regional parks which are more or less the same as national parks in all but in official status (parcs naturels régionaux), hundreds of areas listed and protected under the official European Natura 2000 programme, and even - off the beaten track - hundreds more sites that would be classified as Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONBs) in England, but do not even get a mention in guidebooks in France.
The six national parks in continental France are:
The Cévennes national park (Languedoc)
Les Ecrins (Provence - Alps)
Le Mercantour (Provence)
Les Pyrénées (Hautes Pyrénées)
La Vanoise (Provence)
Port-Cros (Coastal park, Var, Provence)
See French national parks official website Among the principal regional parks are:
The Auvergne volcanoes - high upland rising to over 1800 m.
Parc régional de la Brenne ( Pays de la Loire) - lakes and wetlands popular with ornithologists.
The Grandes Causses (Aveyron - Lozère) - arid southern uplands
The Morvan hills ( Burgundy) - the closest area of low mountain environment to Paris
The Ballon des Vosges (Lorraine - Alsace) - forested mountains in Eastern France.
More information:
Winter sports in French mountain areas:
Wildlife parks in France :
Among the most interesting of France's many wildlife parks, are
- The Parc de Thoiry, west of Paris, over 150 species in a safari park covering over 300 acres.
- Zoo Parc de Beauval, in the Loir et Cher department, in the Loire valley area. Over 4000 animals, including koalas aned orang-utangs. the largest wildlife collection in France.
- Planete Sauvage, south west of Nantes. A large safari park (over 250 acres) , with safari tours. Over 2,000 animals in semi liberty.
- Réserve Africaine de Sigean, near Narbonne in the Languedoc. 3,800 animals in a huge area of natural mediterranean environment, one of Europe's oldest safari parks and the biggest tourist attractions in the area.
- African Safari park, at Plaisance du touch, just outside Toulouse, in the Midi Pyrenees region.
Theme parks in France :
France has getting on for 100 different theme parks, if you include all categories from the amusement parks such as Eurodisney, through wildlife parks and aquariums, to living history open-air museums such the Alsace Ecomusée. Among the most popular of these sites are:
Euro Disneyland, Marne la Vallée, Paris
Parc Astérix - Parc Astérix Plailly north of Paris
Puy du Fou historical reenactments theme park, Vendée
Mer de Sable Theme Park - Ermenonville, just north of Paris
The Futuroscope park, near Poitiers
Vulcania, the volcano theme park, Auvergne
France Miniature at Elancourt, west of Paris (replicas of France's major monuments)
The Bioscope environmental theme park, Alsace
Ecomusée d'Alsace, near Colmar, France's largest open-air museum
Nigloland theme park, near Troyes, southern Champagne.
Other attractions:
The Tour de France cycle race (July)
Wine, dine , culture :
France is world famous for its "gastronomy", its fine restaurants and wines. It sometimes surprises visitors from outside France, that they can find top quality restaurants even in small provincial towns, and that many of these offer first-class menus at a fraction of the price one would pay for something similar in Britain or the USA. There are several directories that approve and list the top restaurants, and the most famous of these are the Michelin guide and the Gault et Millau guide. However, there is no directory that lists all the good restaurants in France, since some of these are found in the most unexpected out-of-the-way places, and while the food they offer is not "haute cuisine", it is tasty, well prepared and nourishing.
Restaurants and eating out in France
Some good restaurants in the Auvergne
Some good restaurants in Brittany
France abounds in cultural opportunities, with a wealth of concerts and other music events throughout the year. visit the France for music-lovers page for more details
By region :
Follow these links for a more detailed list of major tourist attractions, the main things to see and do in the French regions::
A brief introduction to the regions of France
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