As a foreigner you can only guess what Montmartre means, it is easy to guess that “Mont” means “Mount” as the place is a large hill in Paris. But “martre” may sound a little like “mother”, so you think maybe it means Mary , the mother of Jesus. This association might arised after you visited the Notre-Dame, which means “Our Lady”. So Montmatre maybe means the Mount of Mother, you think.
An Indonesian might think “martre” means
“matre” which means materialistic. But people would not name a place like this a
“Materialistic Mount”, so it is not possible to mean like that. Montmartre was
once the place where artists, writers and bohemians who lived, worked and gathered
in cafes and bars, while they were poor. Its
low rents lured struggling artists whose canvases now sell for millions, such
as Renoir, Degas, Picasso, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Utrillo. So if we consider this, Montmartre should
sound more like an “Artistic Mount” rather than “Materialistic Mount”, don’t
you think so?
Actually rather than making some hazard
guesses it is easier to open a dictionary , Montmartre is the French word for
the “Mount of Martyrs”, as the name is related to the 3rd century bishop of
Paris. Bishop Denis was apprehended by the Romans and sentenced to death for
teaching Christianity. There are various versions of the bishop’s martyrdom. One
legend states that he was beheaded on the hill, after which the body picked up
the head and carried it to the Parisian Saint Denis suburb. The bust of the
decapitated bishop is located atop the hill of Montmartre.
Nowadays, a popular landmark in Montmartre,
the Sacré-Cœur Basilica is located at the summit of the hill, the highest point
in the city. Sacré-Cœur means Sacred Heart as it is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which
was an increasingly popular vision of a loving and sympathetic Christ. The
basilica was designed by Paul Abadie. Construction began in 1875 and was consecrated
in 1919.
Montmartre was once towered with 30 windmills, used to press
grapes and mill grain. Nowadays one of
these windmills still stand, the famous "Red Windmill" — the Moulin Rouge
cabaret theatre. When it opened in 1889,
the lively nightclub seemed to sum up the pleasure-seeking belle époque, a
period of high artistic or cultural development.
Unmissable as you wander Montmartre for
the spinning red windmill on its roof, the Moulin Rouge is an unforgettable mix
of colour, movement and sound. The cabaret show performed by young girls
dancing the sexy Can Can, was a magnet for all Parisians. The show featuring
beautiful topless dancers, has become world famous.