LGBT culture in Paris
Paris, the capital of France, has an active LGBT community. In the 1990s, 46% of the country's gay men lived in the city. As of 2004, Paris had 140 LGBT bars, clubs, hotels, restaurants, shops, and other commercial businesses. Florence Tamagne, author of "Paris: 'Resting on its Laurels'?", wrote that there is a "Gaité parisienne"; she added that Paris "competes with Berlin for the title of LGBT capital of Europe, and ranks only second behind New York for the title of LGBT capital of the world." It has France's only gayborhoods that are officially organized.
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
LGBT culture in Paris
Paris, the capital of France, has an active LGBT community. In the 1990s, 46% of the country's gay men lived in the city. As of 2004, Paris had 140 LGBT bars, clubs, hotels, restaurants, shops, and other commercial businesses. Florence Tamagne, author of "Paris: 'Resting on its Laurels'?", wrote that there is a "Gaité parisienne"; she added that Paris "competes with Berlin for the title of LGBT capital of Europe, and ranks only second behind New York for the title of LGBT capital of the world." It has France's only gayborhoods that are officially organized.
has abstract
Paris, the capital of France, ...... that are officially organized.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
43,935,909
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,009,437,005
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
wikiPageUsesTemplate
hypernym
type
comment
Paris, the capital of France, ...... that are officially organized.
@en
label
LGBT culture in Paris
@en