


You can review an Accommodation that you booked through our Platform if you stayed there or if you arrived at the property but didn’t actually stay there. Note that guests submit their subscores and their overall scores independently, so there’s no direct link between them. In addition, guests can give separate ‘subscores’ in crucial areas, such as location, cleanliness, staff, comfort, facilities, value for money and free Wi-Fi. To get the overall score that you see, we add up all the review scores we’ve received and divide that total by the number of review scores we’ve received. There is so much to see and so much to do that one cannot detail it all in a reasonable amount of space, but you are guaranteed to find something of interest in this fascinating area.Each review score is between 1-10.

This is something that you will have to decide for yourself. Some people prefer the cafes which are further up the street than the Cluny museum as they tend to be a little more traditional while others prefer the more modern tastes of those placed more centrally. There's also lots to see if you walk along St Michel Boulevard. There are plenty of stained glass and exhibits of stone work and early paintings. Some of the exhibits include the "Lady and the Unicorn" tapestries as well as the original heads of statues from the Notre Dame cathedral.

This museum was once an ancient Roman Bath and you will find a number of incredible artifacts from those times still inside the museum. If you find the intersection between the two main streets you will not be far from the famous Cluny Museum. It is on these many small streets that you will find all the fascinating cafes and restaurants and small shops that populate the area. There are literally hundreds of smaller, rather crooked streets that run from these main tributaries. The Latin Quarter is cut in half by the Boulevard St, Germain and the Boulevard St. Some establishments that call this area home are the Ecole Normale Superieure, the Ecole des Mines de Paris, the Schola Cantorum, the Jussieu university campus and the Ecole Polytechnique, the most recent addition to the educational institutions in the area. It is still a primarily student populated area, though most of them do not speak Latin any longer. The Latin Quarter can be found on the left bank of the River Seine near Sorbonne. The reason why the Latin Quarter is called that is not because it was historically inhabited by people of Spanish descent, but rather because the students of the various Universities in that area were only allowed to speak Latin to their professors right up until the French Revolution. Most cities around the world have their various "quarters".
