| Description |
From |
To |
Weekly Rate |
|
winter
|
Nov 21 2009
|
Mar 31 2010
|
€750.00EUR
|
|
spring
|
Apr 1 2010
|
Jul 7 2010
|
€850.00EUR
|
* Weekly rate discounts will be applied at the time of booking by a customer service representative if applicable.
Monthly rate range Min €2000
to Max €3000 - Rates applicable to Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec.
Long Term Rates will depend on length of stay and the season.
Guests may arrive on any day of the week.
For long term rentals a monthly maintenance clean is offered by the owners.
There are plants on the terrace and in the apartment. Long term visitors engage to care for these plants during their stay.
7 persons
|
| • 1 fireplace(s) (Log) | • AC Split Unit | | • Washer / Dryer - Private | • Iron / Ironing Board | | • Deck - Private | • BBQ - Private | | • Games Room - Private | |
| • Private Phone (Pay for long distance calls). | • Answering Machine | | • Free High Speed Internet. | • Wireless Network, Printer | | • 1 TV(s) size(s): 65". One or more Tv's are LCD. TV Source is an Antennae | • 1 DVD Player(s) with movies | | • 1 VCR(s) with movies | • 2 Alarm Clock(s) | | • 2 Radio(s) | • 1 Stereo(s) (iPod Station) |
| • Large Fridge (has no freezer) | • Range/Oven | • Range Top | • Convection Oven | | • Microwave | • Toaster | • Coffee Maker | • Wok | | • Waffle Iron | • Griddle | • Matching Dishes | • Matching Glasses | | • Matching Cutlery | • Blender | • Dishwasher | • Dishes, Glasses & Cutlery | | • Pots and Pans | • Basic Spices | • Kettle | • Full Freezer | | • Filtered Water |
Fantastically light and airy with a roof top view of the city.
A dining area after the kitchen bar with chunky table.
The kitchen has recessed lighting and overhead lighting.
The kitchen is high quality fitted kitchen decorated in white and blue.
1 King or 2 Singles Bed (sleeps 2). Two double glazed windows with external shutters and curtains. Bedside tables, reading lamps, tiled floor with rugs, original artwork, arm chair, top quality mattress, large mirror. Large wardrobes.
Ensuite bathroom with WC and large walk-in power shower. All linen provided is 100% cotton.
1 Queen Bed (sleeps 2). One double glazed window and sky light with black out, external shutters and curtains. Bedside tables, reading lamps, tiled floor with rugs, original artwork, chest of drawers, top quality mattress. Large wardrobes in corridor. All linen provided is 100% cotton.
1 Single Upper Bunk Bed (sleeps 1) and 1 Twin Lower Bunk Bed (sleeps 1). Study with long window looking on to stair case logia, round study table, armchair, desk light. Large storage drawer, original artwork.
1 Double Trundle Bed (sleeps 2). A smaller of the living rooms doubles up as a spare bedroom when required. There is a desk and reading lights and access to the family bathroom. The trundle bed makes comfortable sofa or a single bed or opens up into a double bed with legs. Child gates make this a safe area for children to play. The broad band connection is in this area but does have a wireless facility.
Bathroom 1 has toilet, bathtub, shower, hair dryer and two basins.
Bathroom 2 is an en suite and has toilet, shower, hair dryer and one basin.
The Penthouse terrace has roof top views of the neigbourhood and the Cathedral of St Michel. The slate tiled towers of the medieval cité can also be seen from the roof top. The street has many historic and decorative buildings. Opposite the building is the Art Nouveau Town Hall and up the street the Neo-Classical Halles.
There are many windows in the apartment.
Two minutes walk away is Place Carnot home to the big Saturday market.
The Boulevard is two short blocks away. This is the end of the Bastide that leads to the Medieval City.
Below is a list of Ski resorts suitable for a day trip from the Carcassonne Penthouse or the Esperaza Cottage.
At the bottom you will find a comparative summary of distances and estimated travel times.
Les Angles, 66210
Porté-Puymorens, 66760
Puyvalador, 66210
Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via, 6612
Ax-les-Thermes, 09110
Mijanès, 09460
Ascou-Pailhères, Ascou, 09110
Les Monts d'Olmes, Montferrier, 09300
Goulier, 09220
Eyne, 66800
RESORT TIME ESPÉ KMS ESPÉ TIME CARCA KMS CARCA
Les Angles, 66210 1:06:00 67 1:49 111
Porté-Puymorens, 66760 1:23:00 90 2:06 133
Puyvalador, 66210, 0:57:00 102 0:57 59
Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via, 66120 1:21:00 84 2:04 127
Eyne, 66800 1:21:00 82 2:03 126
Goulier, 09220 1:37:00 95 1:48 122
Ascou-Pailhères, Ascou, 09110 1:00:00 59 1:43 102
Mijanès, 09460 0:45:00 44 1:28 87
Ax-les-Thermes, 09110 1:02:00 63 1:44 106
• Carcassonne Airport is within a 10 minute(s) drive. Carcssonne airport is accessible by car in less than ten minutes and the airport shuttle but arrives 200 meters from the apartment's door.
Toulouse airport is a drive of 1hour and 10 minutes on the motorway picked up five minutes drive from the apartment.
Perpignan airport is 1hr and 5 minutes drive away again picking up the motorway five minutes drive from the apartment.
Montpellier airport is 1hr and 20 minutes drive away again picking up the motorway five minutes drive from the apartment.
• Transit: can be reached by walking for 5 minute(s). Type of transit is Bus. There is a bus station at the end of the road which goes to local destinations such as swimming lakes. A ten minute walk away is the SNCF train station with direct trains to Toulouse and Narbonne and connections for France and Europe. • Golf: can be reached by driving for 10 minute(s). There are 1 golf course(s) nearby. • Ski lifts or Runs : can be reached by driving for 45 minute(s). RESORT
Les Angles, 66210, 1:49hrs 111kms
Porté-Puymorens, 66760 2:06hrs 133kms
Puyvalador, 66210, 0:57hrs 59 kms
Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via,
66120 2:04hrs 127kms
Eyne, 66800 2:03hrs 126kms
Goulier, 09220 1:48hrs 122kms
Ascou-Pailhères,
Ascou, 09110 1:43hrs 102kms
Mijanès, 09460 1:28hrs 87kms
Ax-les-Thermes, 09110 1:44hrs 106kms
• Shopping and Dining: can be reached by walking for 3 minute(s). The bastide is where the Carcosonnais come to find quality. There are super delicatessens clothing, shoes and house ware boutiques. The Cité has an accessible range also of leather bags, hats and belts, bookshops and crafts.
For dining there are good restaurants scattered on the boulevard that circles the bastide as well as in the bastide itself. The Medieval Cité also has a wide choice of restaurants from reasonable to exquisite and there are interesting auberges and chateax within brief driving distance. • Nearby Attractions: The Cité of Carcassonne
The Cité is a spectacular walled town – the largest medieval town in Europe with its city walls intact. It is a UNESCO World Heritage site and the setting for many films featuring medieval castles. It is one of the few sights in the world that genuinely justifies the epithet "breath taking".
The Cité and the Château Comtal.
The French word cité does translate as city. It translates as walled town. This explains why the cité in Carcassonne occupies only a tiny area of the modern city. The present cité is essentially medieval, although there are traces of older structures, for example some of the towers on the inner ring of defensive walls still retain their distinctive Roman shape and even their Roman foundations. [The inhabitants of Carcassonne being expelled after the fall of the City in 1209] The present Cité is recognizable as the medieval one which was the seat of the Trencavel family, Viscounts of Carcassonne, before the area was annexed by France in the thirteenth century. It was besieged by the French in 1209 soon after the famous massacre at Béziers, during the early stages of the wars against the people of the Languedoc, sometimes known as the Cathar wars or the Albigensian Crusade.
A large part of the structure dates from the pre-French period, including the inner city walls and part of the Viscounts’ castle known as the chateau Comtal. The outer defensive walls and the barbican of the chateau Comtal are French, added in the thirteenth century, and all of it was heavily restored in the nineteenth century. Before the French period it was home to the rich culture of the troubadours and the Cathars.
The cité was restored from 1853 onwards by the great architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc - narrowly escaping the destruction by Victorian philistines that befell so many other historic European cities. It was added to theUNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in 1997.
The folk etymology of the name Carcassonne is endearing and widely believed. According to the story a châtelaine of the city, named Carcas, foiled an attempted seige by the Franks or in some versions the Saracens. At the point of having to surrender through starvation Carcas found the last animal alive in the city - a pig - and fed it with all of the remaining vegetables and offal that remained. She then sent the well fattened pig as a present to the beseigers who, as planned, deduced that the city was well provisioned and seeing no prospect of the city's surrender, upped camp and left. According to this apocryphal story the bells rang out in celebration, giving the city a new name - ("Carcas sona"). A neo-Gothic sculpture of Dame Carcas on a column near the Narbonne Gate is modern. (Gate shown left, detail right)
The Basilica of saint Nazaire
Inside the Cité may be found the Basilica of St-Nazaire.
History of the Cité
The hill site or oppidum of Carsac became an important trading place in the 6th century BC. (Carsac is a Celtic place-name). A people known as the Volcae Tectosages fortified the oppidum there.
In 122 BC the Romans invaded the areas that we now know as Provence and Languedoc. Recognising its strategic importance Carcassonne fortified the hilltop around 100 BC. This Roman settlement was occupied until the mid 5th century AD when it, along with Spain, fell to the Visigoths, invaders from the banks of the Danube.
The Visigothic king Theodoric II took Carcassonne in 453, and a few years later in 462 the Romans ceded the whole area (Septimania) too. Theodoric built further fortifications at Carcassonne, now a frontier post on the northern marches of his kingdom. Traces of these fortifications still stand. Theodoric, an Arian Christian, is thought to have begun the building of a church now replaced by the basilica in the Cité dedicated to Saint Nazaire.
Carcassonne remained under Visigoth rule from 460 to 725. A generation or so later, in 752, the Moors gave way to the Caroligian king, Pépin the Short, who did manage to take Carcassonne, making it a Frankish City.
In 1067 Carcassonne became, through marriage, the property of Raymond Bernard Trencavel, viscount of Albi and Nîmes. In the following centuries the Trencavel family allied in succession either with the Counts of Barcelona (later Kings of Aragon) or with the House of Toulouse. They built the Château Comtal and the Basilica of Saint-Nazaire. In 1096 Pope Urban II blessed the foundation stones of the new cathedral. Carcassonne was one of the centres of Occitan culture, where literacy flourished and the troubadour tradition was developed, patronized by great princes like the Trencavel dynasty.
The Viscount of Carcassone as depicted on a modern mural in Carcassonne. For over a century the Medieval city of Carcassona enjoyed tremendous influence under the Trencavel family. This was brought to an end during the disasterous wars against the Cathars of the Languedoc. One of the important events in the first stages of the war was the siege of Carcassonne. In August 1209 the crusading army of Arnaud Amaury (not as is often claimed Simon de Montfort) forced its citizens to surrender having siezed Raymond-Roger Trencavel during a truce. Raymond Roger was murdered, or at least left to die, in his own prison, and Simon de Montfort was appointed the new viscount. De Montfort added to the fortifications. At the end of the wars the Languedoc was annexed by the French crown. Carcassona became a French city called Carcassonne.
In 1240 Raymond-Roger's son tried to reconquer his inheritance, but in vain. The city submitted to the rule of kingdom of France, though there would be more attempted rebellions into modern times as the local people attempted to return to their traditional allegence to the Kings of Aragon, the Trencavels' suzerains.
In 1247, King Louis IX of France founded the new part of the town across the river - the Bastide de Saint Louise where the apartment is situated, now in the heart of the ville basse.
Louis (Saint Louis) and his successor Philip III built the present outer ramparts of the old Cité. Opinion at the time considered the fortress to be impregnable. Indeed, when Edward the Black Prince attacked Carcassonne in 1355 during the Hundred Years' War, his troops destroyed the Ville Basse without much trouble, but he failed to take the old Cité.
Carcassonne continued to hold strategic value, now for the French as a central and second line of defense against the Spanish. A series of border castles known as the five sons of Carcassonne (Queribus, Termes, Aguila, Peyreperteuse and Puilaurens) provided the first line of defence. It is possible to comfortably to see several of these impressive sites on a day trip. In 1659, under the Treaty of the Pyrenees the Roussillon passed from Aragon to France. This meant that the Franco-Spanish border shifted south. The border castles were no longer border castles and a new set of fortifications were built under de Vauban. Carcassonne's strategic importance was reduced and it was allowed to fall into disrepair.
Carcassonne was removed from the schedule of official fortifications under Napoleon, and the fortified Cité of Carcassonne fell into such disrepair that the French government decided that it should be demolished. An official decree to that effect that was issued in 1849. It caused an uproar. By great good fortune the Mayor of Carcassonne, Jean-Pierre Cros-Mayrevieille, was an antiquary. He and Prosper Mérimée, the first inspector of ancient monuments in France, led a campaign to preserve the fortress as a historical monument.
Soon, the architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, already at work restoring the Basilica of Saint-Nazaire in the Cité was commissioned to renovate the whole place. After centuries of neglect it was heavily restored, and it is this restored city that makes such an impact today, a World Heritage site, with plenty of sites to see and places to visit including festivals in the City. Fortifications consist of a double ring of ramparts with 53 towers along the curtain walls.
Access to the Medieval City is free.
The medieval walled town lies on the right bank of the River Aude and is featured on UNESCO’s World Heritage list. It has 52 towers and 2 rings of town walls making a total of 3 km of battlements. There is no restriction on access to this area of Carcassonne. It is still home today to its population of approximately 120 and it boasts a large number of shops and craftsmen.
Guided tours, gallery talks, educational activities (for children). Lapidary museum, permanent exhibition on the restoration of the Cité in the 19th century.
Basilica of Saint-Nazaire
Place de l'église
Carcassonne
Open all year. Weekdays: from 9.00am to 11.45pm and 1.45pm to 6pm (closes at 5pm during the winter) - Sundays: from 9.00am to 10.45am and 2pm to 5pm (closes at 4:30pm during the winter).
Free
50% of the rent is required to complete the booking (balance due 60 days in advance). A refundable security/damage deposit of 200 is required. If you cancel less than 60 days prior, there is no refund. Owner accepts payments by: Personal Cheque (Available for guests booking 21 or more days prior to arrival) - PayPal - Direct Bank Deposit
*Please note that the above policies relate to the Owner's portion only.
• No smoking is allowed. • Children are allowed. A Crib, High Chair and a Play Pen can be provided. • Check in after 11:00 AM and check out before 2:00 PM. Check in/out times may be flexible upon request. • A maximum of 2 Dogs are allowed under 75lbs (34kg) in size but must be approved by the Owner. A fee of 50 will apply. • There is no specific quiet time policy, though guests are asked to be respectful of any neighbours. • An optional Daily Maid Service is available for the following fee of 30. • Housekeeping is provided prior to arrival and after departure.
|