Carnavalet Museum
The Carnavalet Museum tells Paris's complete story through artifacts, rooms, and reconstructions spanning 2,600 years.
About Carnavalet Museum
The Carnavalet Museum tells Paris's complete story through artifacts, rooms, and reconstructions spanning 2,600 years. You'll walk through actual salons from demolished Parisian hôtels particuliers, see Napoleon's toiletry case, and stand in recreated Revolutionary-era shops with original signage. The Marcel Proust bedroom recreation includes his actual furniture and cork-lined walls. Revolutionary artifacts dominate-guillotine keys, Robespierre's shaving kit, and propaganda posters fill entire floors.
The visit flows chronologically through 100 rooms across two connected 17th-century mansions. Medieval Paris occupies the ground floor, then you climb through Renaissance galleries to Revolutionary chaos on the first floor. The Belle Époque rooms feel like frozen-in-time apartments with Mucha posters and Art Nouveau furniture. Some rooms overwhelm with density-glass cases packed floor to ceiling with pottery, coins, and documents.
Start with the Revolutionary rooms on the first floor if you're short on time-they're genuinely fascinating. The medieval archaeology section drags unless you love pottery shards. The garden courtyards provide necessary breathing room between dense exhibitions. The 2021 renovation improved lighting dramatically, but some rooms still feel cramped. Allow three hours minimum if you actually read the placards.
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