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Père Lachaise Cemetery

Père Lachaise Cemetery

Paris's most storied cemetery — 44 hectares of history, art, and iconic graves since 1804.
Location Paris

Père Lachaise Cemetery is the largest cemetery in Paris, covering 44 hectares across the 20th arrondissement, and is widely considered the most visited cemetery in the world. It opened on 21 May 1804 under Napoleon Bonaparte's administration, part of a sweeping urban reform that moved burials outside the city's overcrowded parish churchyards. The cemetery takes its name from Père François de la Chaise, the Jesuit confessor to King Louis XIV, who had previously maintained a residence on the same hillside. Designed in the English garden style by architect Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart, its layout of tree-lined cobblestone paths, rolling terrain, and dense canopy gives it the feel of a open-air museum rather than a conventional burial ground.

In its early years, the cemetery attracted few Parisian families, who preferred established parish grounds. To change public perception, the city's prefect orchestrated a bold marketing move: in 1817, the presumed remains of medieval writer Molière and fabulist Jean de La Fontaine were transferred here, followed by those of the legendary medieval lovers Héloïse and Abélard. The strategy worked, and Père Lachaise quickly became the most coveted burial address in France. Today, an estimated one million people have been interred within its grounds, across approximately 70,000 tombs. Some 33,000 memorials and structures in the oldest sections — including the late 19th-century Neo-Byzantine crematorium and columbarium — are designated as protected historical monuments.

The roll call of permanent residents is staggering in its cultural breadth. Composers Frédéric Chopin and Georges Bizet rest here alongside writers Marcel Proust, Oscar Wilde, Honoré de Balzac, and Colette. Painters Eugène Delacroix and painters of stage and screen such as Sarah Bernhardt and Maria Callas share the hillside with singer Édith Piaf and rock icon Jim Morrison, whose grave has drawn devoted pilgrims since his death in Paris in 1971. Wilde's tomb, designed by sculptor Jacob Epstein in 1914, is a winged Art Deco figure now enclosed in glass after decades of visitors leaving lipstick kisses on the stone.

Visiting Père Lachaise is best approached with a printed or downloaded map — the cemetery's winding paths and numbered divisions (called divisions) can be disorienting without one, and free maps are available at the main entrance on Boulevard de Ménilmontant. The cemetery is open daily, with slightly longer hours on weekends. The nearest Métro stop is Philippe Auguste on Line 2, directly at the main entrance; the Père Lachaise station on Lines 2 and 3 serves a side entrance roughly 500 metres away. Flat shoes are strongly recommended — the cobblestones and uneven terrain make heels impractical. Early morning visits on weekdays offer the most atmospheric experience, with mist filtering through the chestnuts and few other visitors in sight.

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