Company Category : Standard |
Company name : Croisi Europe |
Ship name : Seine Princess 4* |
Journey Start Date : Sat 16 Nov 2019 |
Journey End Date : Tue 19 Nov 2019 |
Port end : Paris / France |
Count Nights : 3 nights |
Day | Port | Date | Arrival | Departure |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Paris / France | Sat 16 Nov | 18:00 | |
2 | Paris / France | Sun 17 Nov | ||
2 | THE DEFENSE / France | Sun 17 Nov | ||
3 | MONMARTR / France | Mon 18 Nov | ||
4 | Paris / France | Tue 19 Nov | 09:00 |
Build Year : 2002 |
Width : 11.00 |
Length : 110.00 |
Capacity : 138 |
Cabin Quantity : 67 |
the capital of France, on the Seine River; population 2,203,817 (2006). Paris was held by the Romans, who called it Lutetia, and by the Franks, and was established as the capital in 987 under Hugh Capet. It was organized into three parts—the Île de la Cité (an island in the Seine), the Right Bank, and the Left Bank—during the reign of Philippe-Auguste 1180–1223. The city's neoclassical architecture dates from the modernization of the Napoleonic era, which continued under Napoleon III, when the bridges and boulevards of the modern city were built.
the capital of France, on the Seine River; population 2,203,817 (2006). Paris was held by the Romans, who called it Lutetia, and by the Franks, and was established as the capital in 987 under Hugh Capet. It was organized into three parts—the Île de la Cité (an island in the Seine), the Right Bank, and the Left Bank—during the reign of Philippe-Auguste 1180–1223. The city's neoclassical architecture dates from the modernization of the Napoleonic era, which continued under Napoleon III, when the bridges and boulevards of the modern city were built.
the capital of France, on the Seine River; population 2,203,817 (2006). Paris was held by the Romans, who called it Lutetia, and by the Franks, and was established as the capital in 987 under Hugh Capet. It was organized into three parts—the Île de la Cité (an island in the Seine), the Right Bank, and the Left Bank—during the reign of Philippe-Auguste 1180–1223. The city's neoclassical architecture dates from the modernization of the Napoleonic era, which continued under Napoleon III, when the bridges and boulevards of the modern city were built.