La Mer, le Canal & les Pyrénées

The Sun King (Louis XIV)

Again from Wikepedia:

In 1659, Cardinal Mazarin spent several months in Saint-Jean-de-Luz, from where he would embark on almost daily trips to Pheasant Island in the river Bidassoa (near modern-day Hendaye) for Franco-Spanish meetings that resulted in the Treaty of the Pyrenees, one clause of which was the marriage of Louis XIV to Maria Theresa, the Infanta of Spain. Saint-Jean-de-Luz and its church were chosen to host the royal wedding on 9 June 1660. The marriage is one of the most important political marriages in history that brought an end to a bitter war. Today, visitors of the cathedral can see that the main door is bricked off. Two legends circulate this oddity: First, it has been said that the door the couple passed through was later closed to represent the closing of the troubles between France and Spain. A more popular theory among the locals is that the king, Louis XIV, ordered the door to be closed off, so no other couple could walk into the church to be married in his footsteps.

BTW, an 'infanta' is the daughter of the ruling monarch in Spain or Portugal, especially an eldest daughter who was not the heir to the throne. In Spain, only the heir to the throne is a prince or princess.

Louis XIV stayed in this house for a number of months during the signing of the Treaty and the wedding celebrations:

IMG_20241124_145312798_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241124_145654433_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241124_150701788 medium.jpg


The infanta, Maria Teresa, stayed this house about 100m away for a few days before the wedding:

IMG_20241128_145057208 medium.jpg


And the church where the wedding took place. As in Ainhoa, it is interesting that there are wooden galleries all around the inside of the church; something I haven't seen anywhere except in the Basque country.

IMG_20241124_151559056_HDR medium.jpg


And the main door that was closed off after the wedding:

IMG_20241124_152146368 medium.jpg
 
Bordeaux

From Saint-Jean-de-Luz we drove north to Bordeaux where we are due to hand our car back. I've been sitting on a few Hilton Honors points since before the pandemic but it's become difficult to get decent value since Hilton moved to dynamic pricing. I decided to bite the bullet and booked the Hilton Garden Inn for five nights; not great value but good enough. It's pretty typical of a Garden Inn...

IMG_20241129_171522352_HDR medium.jpg


The view from our room:

IMG_20241202_074701406 medium.jpg

IMG_20241202_085127551 medium.jpg


From the Garden Inn it's a 15 minute walk to the nearest tram station from where it's three stops to the centre of town (EUR1.90 per trip but you can get 24, 48 and 72 hour passes)...

IMG_20241130_124636100_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_134640289 medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_124623727_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_134234077_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_134608574_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_142731962_HDR medium.jpg
 
Last edited:
I'm shocked how busy Bordeaux is! Mind you, I haven't been there for (a-hem) 25 years. The whole world is significantly busier than 25 years ago.
 
I'm shocked how busy Bordeaux is! Mind you, I haven't been there for (a-hem) 25 years. The whole world is significantly busier than 25 years ago.

I was surprised too. Most of SW France seems to have shut down once November rolled around but Bordeaux is very busy. Could have something to do with Christmas markets starting up or maybe something else but it is certainly very busy. Hate to think what it is like in peak season if this is their quiet time!

Seems to be quite a lot of Spaniards in town.
 
I'm shocked how busy Bordeaux is! Mind you, I haven't been there for (a-hem) 25 years. The whole world is significantly busier than 25 years ago.

Some more examples of how busy it is in Bordeaux (and this is December)

IMG_20241130_180112429_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_175818408_HDR medium.jpg


And lots of restaurants have queues to get in...

IMG_20241130_125451711 medium.jpg

IMG_20241130_130647184_HDR medium.jpgIMG_20241130_134120665_HDR medium.jpg


especially the following one that only serves one dish: steak with chips and salad. No bookings accepted; you just have to join the queue. Every time we walked past the queue was down the street and around the corner...

IMG_20241206_125257871_HDR medium.jpg

IMG_20241206_125322332 medium.jpg

IMG_20241206_125451798_HDR medium.jpg

Must be bloody good chips!
 
Last edited:
Read our AFF credit card guides and start earning more points now.

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

I'm shocked how busy Bordeaux is! Mind you, I haven't been there for (a-hem) 25 years. The whole world is significantly busier than 25 years ago.
I too am shocked at how busy Bordeaux is. We were there in May and I thought it was busy then. But much more busy now.

We also saw the queues for the steak restaurant and lots of Asian tourists lined up. Must be rated high on Trip Advisor.

If you are still in Bordeaux opposite the steak is a great wine bar called Bar Vin . Locate din a beautiful old building and serves lots ot local wines by the glass at very reasonable prices. We visited every afternoon. And also near there is a 5 story wine shop with a spiral stairway leading to the top.

We also loved the big daily marche.
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top