Tickets not included: 
Tickets are not included
Hotels not included: 
Hotels not included
  • Brittany 2 days Description

    Day 1  

    After picking you up at your hotel, during the 1 hour drive (approximately) to Chartres, your guide will give you an introduction to the city of Chartres as well as Gothic Art.

    Located about 50 miles southwest of Paris, in the town of Chartres , the  « Capital of Light and Perfume », the Cathedral Notre-Dame de Chartres is without doubt one of the finest examples of Gothic architecture in the world.  The cathedral that we see today was built over a 26-year period after the fire of 1194. Several other churches and an earlier cathedral had already stood in the same location when work on the current cathedral started, including an impressive roman style cathedral which remains can be seen predominantly in the crypt and the west towers. Upon your arrival, you will have an exhaustive private guided visit of the cathedral (inside and outside).

    Ornamented with over four thousand sculptures, the cathedral has been an important destination for travelers since the 12th C many of whom that come to venerate its famous relic: the “Santa Camisa” (the tunic worn by the Virgin Mary at Christ’s birth), the others that come to admire  the remarkable collection of 176 stain-glass windows that create  a relatively dark but richly colored interior in which the light filtering through the myriad narrative and symbolic windows is a main source of illumination. (Some myths believe that nowadays people cannot create anymore the same blue color called “Chartres blue” which dominates the windows of Chartres).

    The  labyrinth, in the center of the nave , one of the biggest labyrinth ever built in French cathedrals and the crypt beneath the cathedral  are 2 other “not to miss” attractions  inside before focusing on the outstanding architectural structure :  the cathedral towers built in different styles, , the façade with the detailed sculptures and statues, , the astronomical clock of the 15thC, the nave and flying buttresses and the bishops garden where you can enjoy the view over the old city and the labyrinth garden of the 18th C.

    After the private visit of the Cathedral, you will enjoy a stroll around the city before heading  to Rennes.

     

    You will reach Rennes that is the capital city of Brittany to enjoy at first a great lunch ((not included in the tour price) in one of the typical bistros of the city (not included in the price). Then, your private guide will give you a guided visit of the city that includes the impressive historical centre where you will see the old timber framing medieval houses and one of the most refined garden in France designed by Denis Buhler, The Thabor Park that used to be the orchard of the monks of Saint Melaine Abbey. This former 11th century abbey was rebuilt in the 14th and 17th centuries.

    You will stop by the parliament, actually the court of justice nowadays, designed by Salomon De Brosse, the architect of the Luxembourg Palace in Paris, the actual Senate. You will pass by the city hall, designed by Gabriel 1st architect of the king Louis the XVth who designed the Concorde Square in Paris and several parts in Versailles palace such as the Petit Trianon. He is the one who redesigned most of the areas after the big fire that took place in 1720. Fortunately, the fire did not reach the historical centre of Rennes and its 15thand 16th century buildings. This guided visit will give you a complete vision of the historical local heritage.

    The Cathedral St-Pierre of Rennes is at least the third building in that spot since the 6th century. It’s been completed in 1844 that means that you will see several aspects of different times and styles: Gothic, Renaissance, Classic and Roman Basilica.

    You will also have the opportunity to get an amazing prospective of the city during the market  “Des Lices” that hosts the 2nd food market of France where 300 local or regional producers and 10000 people gather in a very colourful and authentic moment. This amazing market is opened only on the saturdays.

     

    St-Malo was named after Maclow a monk who came from Wales in the 6th century based on the hermitage settlement tradition and the evangelization of the local population.

    St-Malo city is one of the greatest examples of the fortifications works made between the 12th and the early 18th centuries. The greatest military engineer Maréchal Vauban and his disciple Simèon Garengeau designed in the 17th century the expansions and reinforcement city walls and the amazing island forts such as la Conchée, le Fort National, Harbour, le Grand Bé where François René de Chateaubriand one of the most famous French Romantic Writer is buried.

    Walking on the city ramparts you will see and understand that St-Malo was originally an island.

    You will visit with your private guide the Saint-Vincent Cathedral where some of the most famous people are buried such as the bishop Jean de Chatillon, real founder of St-Malo as we know it today, Jacques Cartier who discovered Canada in the 16th century. Thanks to the Cathedral to have a different point of view you will see what St-Malo had to go through during World War 2.

    80% of the city was down until the reconstruction that started in 1947.

    To really understand the story and the expansion of St-Malo, your private tour-guide will take you to Alet area, the original settlement of Maclow where there is still a left over of the Roman city wall, that same area where the German troops established a heavy battery artillery on the Atlantic wall.

    Night in St-Malo

    (Entrance fees not included)

     

    Day 2

    You will start your day with the visit of Dinan.

    One of the most beautiful medieval cities in Brittany is located on a 75 meters (220 feet) high hill over the Rance River and offers a unique overview of the Rance. From here, by Saint-Sauveur Basilica, where the heart of the constable Bertrand Duguesclin is kept, you will notice that the river is under the influence of the tides. That’s why from St-Malo to Dinan, the people call it the sea river and from Dinan to its source further inland it is the river.

    Dinan became the Duke of Brittany territory in the late 13thcentury that’s why huge city walls were built. The wealth, until the French Revolution, was exhibited through Saint-Sauveur Basilica, the private mansions, the Belfry…But thanks to all the stores, inns of the city that you can still see today the main aspects of Dinan are the timber frame houses very well preserved covering the period that goes from the 15th to the 17th century. Dinan is an amazing journey through the middle ages.

     

    Then you will head to Dinard that sprawls around the Western approaches of the Rance estuary with its casino, spacious villas, social calendar of regattas and the beautiful “Plage de l’Ecluse” with the unexpected statue of Alfred Hitchcock. You will follow the enjoyable footpath that leads to “Pointe du Moulinet” from where you will have a marvelous view over St Malo.

    The perfect place for lunch.

     

    Montmarin

    Then, you will visit the amazing gardens of la Malouinière le Montmarin listed as national monument and dating from 1760 and the only Malouinière located in the left bank of the Rance river.

    A Malouinière was a large secondary residence where the rich ship-owners could stay because St-Malo was too neural inside the walls. The Montmarin Malouinière is not opened to the visitors because people live inside but the 6 ha gardens are with 2 parks one “à la Française” and one “à l’Anglaise”, an enchantment!!!

    Montmarin is closed on the saturdays

    On the drive back to Paris you will stop in a nice little town in Normandy.(if time)

    (Entrance fees included when non-mentioned)

    Extra charge for a pick up and/or a drop off outside Paris

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