Top 10 Things To Do In Paris

Paré Yes Yes! You fall in love with this romantic city increasingly longer you stay to explore the sights and enjoy the French culture. Paris has a certain je ne sais quoi – that something special that you can not put my finger on, but anyway, it makes you want to linger in Paris for as long as possible .

Unfortunately, most tourists visiting Paris have a very limited amount of time to see everywhere, here are my 10 favorites. At the end of the lens, I added a bonus section which has some more adventures for those who go to Paris for a little more. No matter what you choose Top 10 Things to do in Paris, can not go wrong because the people of Paris are so lush, romantic and full of life that can not help but feel the same way.

Cinema of Iceland

Iceland has had a notable cinema industry for some time. Major actors include Ingvar E. Sigurðsson, Hilmir Snær Guðnason. Famous films include the Icelandic comedy film 101 Reykjavík which was released in 2000 directed by Baltasar Kormákur. The film starred such actors as Victoria Abril and Hilmir Snær Guðnason. Famous Icelandic director Baltasar Kormákur also directed Hafið and A Little Trip to Heaven.

Foreign trade

Another result of the dominance of subsistence farming in Iceland was the lack of specialisation and commerce between farms. Interior trade seems to have been frowned upon as a type of usury even from the age of settlement as testified in some of the Icelandic sagas. Trade with foreign merchant ships was lively, however, and vital for the economy, especially for cereals and honey, alcohol and (later) tobacco. Fishing ships from the coastal areas of Europe would stop for provisions in Icelandic harbors and trade what they had with the locals. This would include stale beer, salted pork, biscuits and chewing tobacco sold for knitted wool mittens, blankets etc. Merchant ships would also arrive occasionally from Holland, Germany, England, Scotland, Ireland, France and Spain, to sell their products, mainly for stockfish, prominently displayed in the royal seal of Iceland. In 1602 the Danish king, who was worried about the activities of English and German ships in what he saw as his own waters, instituted a trade monopoly in Iceland, restricting commerce to Danish merchants who were, in turn, required to regularly send merchant ships to Iceland carrying trade goods the country needed. While illegal trade flourished in the 1600s, stricter measures were taken to enforce the monopoly in 1685. The monopoly remained in vigor until 1787. One of its results was the predominance of rye grown in Denmark, and the introduction of brennivín, an akvavit produced from rye, at the cost of other cereals and beer.

Curiosity

* For Iceland live twice more sheep than people
* In summer, Iceland day lasts almost 24 hours
* Icelanders ogrzewają houses (86%) and swimming pools (almost 100%) geothermal water
* For Iceland (territorially 1 / 3 of Poland) is up about 60 airports

Security

The greatest danger is in Iceland by the forces of nature. It should be the power of the rains and (sand-) storms in no way be underestimated, and va treks before the current weather at them and tell someone where you go and when where you want to arrive.

The risk of thefts or robberies is practically nil.

On the coast should be to attacks by gulls and terns in their coalfield not panic. Hochgehaltener an object (stick, etc.) directs otherwise they allegedly from the highest point of man (head) from. An orderly retreat at the first apparent attack (usually fairly scarce on the head) is advisable.

Topography

Iceland is located in the North Atlantic Ocean just south of the Arctic Circle, which passes through the small island of Grímsey off Iceland’s northern coast, but not through mainland Iceland. Unlike neighbouring Greenland, Iceland is considered to be a part of Europe, not of North America, though geologically the island belongs to both continents. Because of cultural, economic and linguistic similarities, Iceland in many contexts is also included in Scandinavia. The closest bodies of land are Greenland (287 km) and the Faroe Islands (420 km). The closest distance to the mainland of Europe is 970 km (to Norway).

Blue Lagoon

Iceland’s most famous geothermal pool, the Blue Lagoon, is the country’s top tourist attraction. It might be crowded and expensive; but there’s nowhere else like it in the world.

Hidden in black lava between the airport and Reykjavík, this huge, milky-blue spa is fed by mineral-rich heated seawater. Add to this weird scenery the silvery towers of the nearby geothermal plant, rolling clouds of steam, and people daubed in white silica-mud, and you might be on another planet. When you’ve finished floating round the spa with a silly smile on your face, you can investigate the extras: hot pots, saunas and steam rooms, and a piping hot waterfall that delivers a powerful hydraulic massage (imagine being pummelled by a troll). If you want proper spa treatments, professional masseurs can knead out your knots (book well in advance). There’s a bar-restaurant with spa-side seating and a shop selling Blue Lagoon products.

Reykjavík

Reykjavík [ˈreiːcaˌviːk]) is the capital and largest city of Iceland. Its latitude at 64°08′ N, the world’s most northern national capital. It is located in southwestern Iceland, on the southern shore of Faxaflói Bay. With a population of 119,000, it is the heart of Iceland’s economic and governmental activity.

Reykjavík is believed to be the location of the first permanent settlement in Iceland, which Ingólfur Arnarson is said to have established around 870. Until the 18th century, there was no urban development in the city location. The city was founded in 1786 as an official trading town and grew steadily over the next decades, as it transformed into a regional and later national center of commerce, population and governmental activities.

Today, Reykjavík is the centre of the Greater Reykjavík Area which, with a population of 200,000, is the only metropolitan area in Iceland. As a highly modernized capital of one of the most developed countries in the world, its inhabitants enjoy a first-class welfare system and city infrastructure. Its location, only slightly south of the Arctic Circle, receives only four hours of daylight per day in the depth of winter; during the summer the nights are almost as bright as the days. It has continued to see population growth in past years as well as growth in areas of commerce and industry.

Reykjavík was recently ranked 1st on Grist Magazine’s “15 Greenest Cities” list

Iceland

Iceland, officially the Republic of Iceland (Icelandic: Ísland or Lýðveldið Ísland; IPA: [ˈliðvɛltɪθ ˈistlant]) is a country in northern Europe, comprising the island of Iceland and its outlying islets in the North Atlantic Ocean between the rest of Europe and Greenland.[1] It is the least populous of the Nordic countries and the second smallest; it has a population of about 316,000 (April 1, 2008 estimate) and a total area of 103,000 km². Its capital and largest city is Reykjavík.

Located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Iceland is volcanically and geologically active on a large scale; this defines the landscape in various ways. The interior mainly consists of a plateau characterized by sand fields, mountains and glaciers, while many big glacial rivers flow to the sea through the lowlands. Warmed by the Gulf Stream, Iceland has a temperate climate relative to its latitude and provides a habitable environment and nature.

The settlement of Iceland began in 874 when, according to Landnámabók, the Norwegian chieftain Ingólfur Arnarson became the first permanent Norwegian settler on the island.[2] Others had visited the island earlier and stayed over winter. Over the next centuries, people of Nordic and Gaelic origin settled in Iceland. Until the twentieth century, the Icelandic population relied on fisheries and agriculture, and was from 1262 to 1918 a part of the Norwegian and later the Danish monarchies. In the twentieth century, Iceland’s economy and welfare system developed quickly.

As of 2007, Iceland is the most developed country in the world with fellow Nordic country Norway according to the Human Development Index[3] and one of the most egalitarian, according to the calculation provided by the Gini coefficient[4]. Based upon a mixed economy where service, finance, fishing and various industries are the main sectors, it is also the fourth most productive country per capita.[5] Icelanders have a rich culture and heritage. Iceland is a member of the UN, NATO, EFTA, EEA and OECD, but not of the European Union. The country is a candidate for a non-permanent seat at the UN Security Council.

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