This handbook treats Paris as a museum of its own history, providing concise historical and antiquarian explanations of architecture, sculpture, painting, and monuments for the culturally minded traveler. It considers why the city developed at particular sites, traces stages of urban growth, and examines churches, palaces, and museums in historical sequence, emphasizing origin, symbolism, and local artistic traditions rather than contemporary curiosities or practical travel logistics. Organized by districts — the Île de la Cité, the Left Bank, the Louvre, the Right Bank, Saint-Denis, and the outer rings — it favors interpretive context over technical connoisseurship and points readers to further reference works for study.