LYON

Lyon at a Glance

PLANNING YOUR TIME

LYON’S CUISINE SCENE

LYON-AREA WINES

Orientation to Lyon

TOURIST INFORMATION

ARRIVAL IN LYON

Map: Lyon

HELPFUL HINTS

GETTING AROUND LYON

Tours in Lyon

Pont Bonaparte Spin Tour

Sights in Lyon

Map: Vieux Lyon

Nightlife in Lyon

Sleeping in Lyon

ON OR NEAR PLACE DES CELESTINS

OTHER PLACES ON THE PRESQU’ILE

HOSTEL

Eating in Lyon

IN OR NEAR VIEUX LYON

ON THE PRESQU’ILE

Map: Vieux Lyon & Presqu’île

ON THE EAST BANK OF THE RHONE

Lyon Connections

Near Lyon: The Rhône Valley

BEAUJOLAIS WINE ROUTE

Straddling the mighty Rhône and Saône rivers between Burgundy and Provence, Lyon has been among France’s leading cities since Roman times. In spite of its workaday, business-first facade, Lyon is France’s most historic and culturally important city after Paris. You’ll experience two different-as-night-and-day cities: the Old World cobbled alleys, pastel Renaissance mansions, and colorful shops of Vieux Lyon; and the more staid but classy, Paris-like buildings and shopping streets of the Presqu’île. Once you’re settled, this big city feels relaxed, welcoming, and surprisingly untouristy. It seems everyone’s enjoying the place—and they’re all French.

PLANNING YOUR TIME

Just two hours by frequent TGV train from Paris, 70 minutes south of Beaune, and two hours north of Avignon, Lyon is France’s best-kept urban secret. Lyon deserves two nights and a full day. With frequent and fast service to Paris, Provence, Burgundy, and the Alps, the city makes a handy overnight stop for train travelers. Those who spend the night can experience its renowned cuisine (at appetizing prices) and enjoy one of Europe’s most beautifully floodlit cities.

For a full day of sightseeing, take a funicular up to Fourvière Hill, visit the Notre-Dame Basilica, and tour the Roman Theaters and Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum. Ride the other funicular back down to Vieux Lyon and have a French (read: slow) lunch, then explore the old town and its hidden passageways. Finish your day touring the Museum of Fine Arts, Resistance Center, or Lumière Museum (covering the history of early filmmaking). Most of Lyon’s important sights are closed on Monday and/or Tuesday. Dine well in the evening (book ahead if possible; your hotelier can help) and cap your day enjoying a stroll through the best-lit city in France.

LYON’S CUISINE SCENE

In Lyon, how well you eat determines how well you live. The best restaurants are all the buzz—a favorite conversation topic likely to generate heated debate. Here, great chefs are more famous than professional soccer players. (Paul Bocuse, who died in 2018, was the chef MVP.) With an abundance of cozy, excellent restaurants in every price range, it’s hard to go wrong—unless you’re an intermediate eater and order tripe (cow intestines, also known as tablier de sapeur), foie de veau (calf’s liver), or tête de veau (calf’s head). Beware: These questionable dishes are common in small bistros (bouchons). Look instead for these classics: St. Marcellin cheese, salade lyonnaise (croutons, fried bits of ham, and a poached egg on a bed of lettuce), green lentils (lentilles) served on a salad or with sausages, quenelles de brochet (fish dumplings in a creamy sauce), and filet de sandre (local whitefish).

LYON-AREA WINES

Fruity and fresh Gamay Beaujolais grapes, which grow in vineyards just north of Lyon, produce a light, easy-to-drink red wine. Beaujolais vines are grown on granite rock slopes, yielding wines with a distinct flavor. While there are several premier crus producing lovely wines, the area is most famous for its simple Beaujolais Nouveau wines, opened just six weeks after bottling. The arrival of the new Beaujolais is cause for lighthearted celebration and mischief in this otherwise hard-to-impress country. At midnight on the third Thursday of November, the first bottles are opened to great fanfare, road rallies carry the new wine to destinations throughout France, and cafés everywhere post signs announcing its arrival.

Big, luscious reds made from mostly syrah grapes grow on steep slopes to the city’s south. Look for Saint-Joseph and (my favorite) Crozes-Hermitage wines. In the village of Condrieu, only viognier grapes are allowed to grow; they produce a rich and perfumy white wine.

Orientation to Lyon

Despite being France’s third-largest city (after Paris and Marseille), with about 1.5 million inhabitants in its metropolitan area, the traveler’s Lyon (home to 485,000 people) is peaceful and manageable. Traffic noise is replaced by pedestrian friendliness in the old center—listen to how quiet this big city is. Notice the emphasis on environmentally friendly transport: Electric buses have replaced diesel buses in the historic core, bike lanes run everywhere, and pedal taxis (called cyclopolitains, seek-loh-poh-lee-tan) are used instead of traditional taxis for short trips (about €1/kilometer). Lyon’s network of more than 5,000 city-owned rental bikes was in place years before Paris started its program.

The people of Lyon are happy to remind visitors that their city may not be the capital of France, but it is the ancient Gallo-Roman capital, the city that introduced Christianity to France, the Renaissance capital (with the finest surviving Renaissance district), the capital of Nazi resistance during World War II, and a cuisine capital. And, while Paris may call itself “the City of Light,” Lyon is a leader in artistic urban lighting—as you’ll see each evening.

You’ll hear the term “Gallo-Roman” a lot here. The Romans conquered the Gauls (the dominant proto-French tribe) and incorporated them into their culture as they established their vast empire. For several centuries, this substantial part of the Roman empire was a Gaulish, or Gallo-Roman, civilization.

The city evolved as it grew, starting on the hill in Gallo-Roman times, moving to a fortified town on the banks of the Saône River with the fall of Rome and through the Renaissance, then filling the Presqu’île (peninsula, pron. press-keel) between the two rivers in the 19th century, before sprawling west of the Rhône in modern times.

Today Lyon provides the organized traveler with a full day of activities. Much of your sightseeing can be enjoyed on foot from any of my recommended hotels, though it’s smart to make use of trams, funiculars, and the Métro. Lyon’s sights are concentrated in three areas: Fourvière Hill, with its white Notre-Dame Basilica glimmering over the city; historic Vieux Lyon, which hunkers below on the bank of the Saône River; and the Presqu’île (home to my recommended hotels), lassoed by the Saône and Rhône rivers. Huge Place Bellecour, which lies in the middle of the Presqu’île, seems oversized...unless it’s hosting an event.

TOURIST INFORMATION

Stop at the well-equipped TI for a city map (with good enlargements of central Lyon and Vieux Lyon; hotels have similar maps), a map of Lyon’s murals, and an event schedule (daily 9:00-18:00, corner of Place Bellecour, free public WCs behind the TI building, +33 4 72 77 69 69, www.lyon-france.com). The TI sells the worthwhile Lyon City Card (described next) and rents an audioguide for touring Lyon (see “Tours in Lyon,” later). The TI also has a brochure on the Beaujolais wine road north of Lyon. Ask about a pocket Wi-Fi device that gives you service all over town; you can leave it in any mailbox before departing Lyon (€8/day, €4 with Lyon City Card).

Sightseeing Pass: Those planning a busy, full day of sightseeing via the public transit system should invest in the Lyon City Card (€25/1 day, €35/2 consecutive days, €45/3 consecutive days, half-price for kids under age 16, sold at TI and most participating museums, may be cheaper online, https://lyoncitycard.com). This pass covers 23 Lyon museums plus buses, trams, funiculars, the Métro, and the river shuttle boat Le Vaporetto. It also covers a river cruise (April-Oct), a tram tour of the hilly Croix-Rousse neighborhood, and a walking tour of Vieux Lyon with a live guide (or use of the TI’s audioguide), and provides discounts on other activities. The one-day pass pays for itself if you visit the Gallo-Roman Museum and the Resistance and Deportation History Center, plus take a guided walking tour and use public transit.

ARRIVAL IN LYON

By Train: Lyon has two train stations—Part-Dieu and Lyon-Perrache. Many trains stop at both, and some through trains connect the two stations. Both stations are well-served by Métro, bus, tram, and taxi (figure €20 to taxi from either station to my recommended hotels near Place Bellecour), and both have the standard car-rental companies. Only Part-Dieu has baggage storage (daily 6:15-23:00) and free Wi-Fi in the waiting area. The all-day transit ticket is a great value—buy it upon arrival at either station if you plan to do much sightseeing that day (unless you plan to get a Lyon City Card). For more on public transportation, see “Getting Around Lyon,” later.

Arriving at Part-Dieu Station: This is where most visitors arrive. There are two exits from the station: Porte du Rhône and Porte des Alpes. Bag check is near the Porte des Alpes exit. To reach Place Bellecour in the city center (close to most hotels and the TI), exit by following Sortie Porte du Rhône signs, keep right, then enter the Métro station and buy your ticket from the machine. Take blue Métro line B toward Gare d’Oullins, transfer at Saxe-Gambetta to line D/Gare de Vaise, and get off at Bellecour. At Bellecour, follow Sortie Rue République signs.

The other main exit, signed as Sortie Porte des Alpes, offers access to the handy airport train (the Rhône Express, described below under “By Plane”). Taxis wait outside both exits.

Arriving at Perrache Station: This station is within a 20-minute walk of Place Bellecour. Follow green Place Carnot signs out of the station, then cross Place Carnot and walk up pedestrian Rue Victor Hugo to reach the TI and most of my recommended hotels. Or take the Métro (direction: Vaulx-en-Velin) two stops to Bellecour and follow Sortie Rue République signs.

By Car: The city center has good signage and is manageable to navigate, though you’ll hit traffic on surrounding freeways. If autoroutes A-6/7 are jammed (not unusual), you’ll be directed to bypass freeways if just passing through Lyon. Follow Centre-Ville and Presqu’île signs, and then follow Office de Tourisme and Place Bellecour signs. Park near Place Bellecour at Parking des Célestins or Parking Antonin Poncet (yellow P means “parking lot”), or get advice from your hotel. The TI’s map identifies all public parking lots. Overnight parking (generally 19:00-8:00) is only €5, but day rates are €2 per hour (figure about €32/24 hours). Garages near Perrache station are cheaper than those near Bellecour.

By Plane: Lyon’s sleek little airport, St-Exupéry, is 15 miles from the city center, and is a breeze to navigate (ATMs, English information booths, code: LYS, +33 8 26 80 08 26, www.lyonaeroports.com). It has air and rail connections to major European cities, including two flights per hour to Paris’ Charles de Gaulle Airport and direct TGV (“InOui”) service to many French cities. Car rental is a snap. Four Rhône Express shuttles per hour make the 30-minute trip from the airport (follow red tram car icons) to Part-Dieu Station, described earlier (€16.50 one-way, €29 round-trip; buy ticket from machine with bills, coins, or chip-and-PIN credit card—conductors can help—or at www.rhonexpress.fr/en). Allow €60 for a taxi or Uber if you have baggage.

HELPFUL HINTS

City Murals: Lyon is famous for its colorful and monumental wall murals. You’ll find them in many neighborhoods (the TI has a map; keep your eyes up). Locations include Fourvière Hill near the Notre-Dame Basilica (Les Fresques de la Sarra); the Croix-Rousse neighborhood (Mur Peint des Canuts, Europe’s largest mural); and several in the Presqu’île area. If visiting Les Halles de Lyon market hall, look for Thank you Monsieur Paul, honoring Lyon’s beloved chef Bocuse.

Market Days: A small market stretches along the Saône River near the Passerelle du Palais de Justice bridge (daily until 12:30). Tuesday through Sunday, it’s produce; Monday, it’s textiles. On Sunday morning, a crafts and contemporary art market is on the other side of the bridge near the Court of Justice. Another bustling morning produce market takes place on Boulevard de la Croix-Rousse (Tue-Sun until 12:30, biggest on Sun, see here).

Festivals and Events: Lyon celebrates the Virgin Mary with candlelit windows during the Festival of Lights each year in early December (www.fetedeslumieres.lyon.fr). Les Nuits de Fourvière—with dance, music, and theater—takes place from early June to early August in the Roman Theaters (www.nuitsdefourviere.com).

Useful Website: For helpful information in English about visiting Lyon, check out www.angloinfo.com/lyon.

Bookstore: Raconte Moi La Terre is a traveler’s bookstore (no books in English) and resource center with a café; it’s also a good place to get online (Mon-Sat 10:00-19:30, closed Sun, free Wi-Fi in café, air-con, 14 Rue du Plat—see map on here, Métro: Bellecour, +33 4 78 92 60 22, www.racontemoilaterre.com).

Laundry: A launderette is at 7 Rue Mercière on the Presqu’île, near the Alphonse Juin bridge; another is between Place Bellecour and Perrache station, a few steps off Rue Victor Hugo at 19 Rue Ste. Hélène. Both have long hours daily (see map on here for locations).

Driver: Design your own half-day or full-day tour with a car and driver (mobile +33 6 65 38 75 08, www.lugdunum-ips.com, contact@lugdunum-ips.com).

Children’s Activities: The Parc de la Tête d’Or is vast, with rowboat rentals, a miniature golf course, pony rides, a free zoo and botanical gardens, and easy access to the riverside bike path (across Rhône River from the Croix-Rousse neighborhood, Métro: Masséna, www.loisirs-parcdelatetedor.com).

GETTING AROUND LYON

By Public Transit

Lyon has a user-friendly public transit system, with five modern tram lines (T1-T4 and the Rhône Express line to the airport), four underground Métro lines (A-D), an extensive bus system, and two funiculars to get you up that hill. The subway is similar to Paris’ Métro (e.g., routes are signed by direction for the last stop on the line) but is more automated (buy tickets at coin-op machines), cleaner, less crowded, and less rushed (drivers linger longer at stops). Study the wall maps to find your direction; ask a local if you’re not certain. Yellow signs lead to transfers, and green signs lead to exits (Sortie).

Tickets: You can transfer between Métro, tram, and bus lines with the same ticket (valid one hour) and can do round-trips, but you must revalidate your ticket whenever boarding (1 hour-€1.90, 1 day-€6.20, 10 rides-€17.80, evening-€3, round-trip funicular-€3, other tickets cover funicular). The one-day ticket is a good deal (even if you only use the funicular and visit one of the outlying museums—Resistance Center or Lumière Museum) and a great time-saver, as you only have to buy a ticket once. Also remember that the Lyon City Card (described earlier, under “Tourist Information”) covers transit.

To use the ticket machines, change the display language to English. Then use the black roller to selectionner your ticket and firmly push the top button twice to confirmer your request. Pay with coins or a chip-and-PIN credit card. In the Métro, insert your ticket in the turnstile, then reclaim it.

By Taxi or Uber

Lyon is not a good taxi town; locals are accustomed to walking and using the excellent tram and subway system. You generally don’t hail cabs in the street, there are few taxi stands, and the minimum fare is a steep €7. If you do need a taxi, try Taxi Lyon at +33 6 82 55 69 34. Uber works here, but not as efficiently as in Paris.

By Bike

While you wouldn’t really sightsee by bike, fine riverside bike paths and big parks make Lyon a fun place for a joyride. You can rent electric or standard bikes at La Bicycletterie (Mon-Sat 8:30-19:00, closed Sun, 16 Rue Romarin, +33 4 37 92 04 96). You can also use handy, city-owned Vélo’v Bikes: Purchase a day ticket (€4/24 hours, discount with Lyon City Card; buy at machines with a chip-and-PIN credit card, online with any credit card, or (easiest) with the app (www.velov.grandlyon.com). You can pick the bike up at one location and leave it at another. The first 30 minutes are free, then the cost rises quickly to encourage short-term use.

Tours in Lyon

On Foot

TI Offerings: The TI’s audioguide (€10/day) offers good self-guided walking tours of Vieux Lyon. The TI also offers live guided walks of Vieux Lyon, usually daily at 14:30 from July through early September and on weekends year-round (€12, 2 hours, several in English, some start near Vieux Lyon Métro station—verify days and times with TI or sign up online, www.visiterlyon.com). Both the audioguide and guided walk options are covered by the Lyon City Card.

Private Guide: Virginie Moré, a talented guide—who also leads tours for my company—offers excellent private tours, including city walks, food-tasting tours, and visits to nearby villages (from €180/half-day, a little extra if she drives her car, mobile +33 6 52 90 88 61, www.virginiemoretravel.com [URL inactive]).

“Free” (Tip-Based) Walks: Hardworking Nicolas (a.k.a. Nico) leads fun and informative 2.5-hour town walks from the Presqu’île to Vieux Lyon, and up to the Croix-Rousse district. While the walks are advertised as free, a generous tip is expected if you enjoyed the experience (Fri-Sun at 14:30, meet in center of Place des Terreaux; night walks Thu-Sat at 21:00 following a different route; meet at Louis XIV statue in Place Bellecour; no need to book ahead for either walk; +33 7 69 61 34 29, www.lyonexplorer.com).

By Bus

Lyon City Tours: This company offers two options for exploring (+33 4 78 56 32 39, www.lyoncitytour.fr). The Lyon City Bus is a hop-on, hop-off tour with 14 stops covering Presqu’île, Fourvière Hill, stretches of the Saône river, and the Confluence area (€15, daily 10:00-18:00, 2/hour). The red Lyon City Tram runs a one-hour loop from Place des Terreaux to the Croix-Rousse district and back (€9, daily 10:15-17:30, 6/day).

Wine Tours and Sightseeing Excursions: Kanpai Tours runs minivan trips to the Beaujolais and northern Rhône Valley wine regions near Lyon (€90/half-day, €110/day for individuals, €400-800/day for private groups up to 8, +33 6 84 52 14 99, www.kanpai-tourisme.com).

By Boat

For a short cruise on the Saône River with nice views of Vieux Lyon, hop aboard Le Vaporetto. This shuttle boat makes a 30-minute trip between Vieux Lyon and the Confluence shopping mall, with a stop at Pont Bonaparte along the way (€5 one-way, covered by Lyon City Card, daily 9:30-21:00; departures posted at stops: every 80 minutes from Pont de la Feuillée in Vieux Lyon starting at 10:20, from Confluence mall starting at 9:30; busy on weekends, no service mid-Dec-Feb). For stops, see map on here.

Pont Bonaparte Spin Tour

This central bridge, just a block from Place Bellecour, is made to order for a day-or-night self-guided spin tour.

• Stand on the bridge and face the golden statue of the Virgin Mary marking the Notre-Dame Basilica on Fourvière Hill. (It’s actually capping the smaller chapel, which predates the church by 500 years.) The basilica is named for the Roman Forum (fourvière) upon which it sits. Now begin to look clockwise.

The Metallic Tower (a pint-sized version of Paris’ Eiffel Tower) is called La Tour Métallique. It was finished five years after the Eiffel Tower, in 1894, as part of a local world’s fair (leftover parts?). Originally an observation tower, today it functions only as a TV tower. The husky, twin-towered church on the riverbank below (St. Jean Cathedral) marks the center of the old town. A block upstream, the Neoclassical columns are part of the Court of Justice (where Klaus Barbie, head of the local Gestapo—a.k.a. “the Butcher of Lyon”—was sentenced to life in prison). Way upstream, the hill covered with tall, pastel-colored houses is the Croix-Rousse district, former home of the city’s huge silk industry. With the invention of the Jacquard looms (1805), which required 12-foot-tall ceilings, new factory buildings were needed and the new weaving center grew up on this hill. In 1850, in good Industrial Revolution style, it was churning with 30,000 looms.

You are standing over the Saône River, which, along with the Rhône, makes up Lyon’s duo of power rivers. The Saône drains the southern area of the Vosges Mountains in Alsace and runs for about 300 miles before joining the Rhône (barely south of here), which flows to the Mediterranean. The Place Bellecour side of the river (behind you) is the district of Presqu’île. This strip of land is sandwiched by the two rivers and is home to Lyon’s Opera House, City Hall, theater, top-end shopping, banks, and all my recommended hotels. A morning market sets up daily under the trees (upriver, just beyond the red bridge). The simple riverfront cafés (buvettes) are ideal for a drink with a view (best at night).

Speaking of bridges, most of Lyon’s bridges—including the one you’re standing on—were destroyed by the Nazis as they checked out in 1944. Looking downstream, the stately mansions of Lyon’s well-established families line the left side of the river. Across the river, still downstream, the 19th-century Neo-Gothic St. Georges Church marks the neighborhood of the first silk weavers. The ridge behind St. Georges is dominated by a big building—once a seminary for priests, now a state high school—and leads us back to Mary.

• Walk across the bridge and continue two blocks to find the funicular station and ride up Fourvière Hill to the basilica (catch the one marked Fourvière, not St. Just). Sit up front and admire the funicular’s funky old technology (€3 round-trip, Métro/tram tickets valid). Or you can skip Fourvière Hill and go directly into the old town (Vieux Lyon) by turning right at St. Jean Cathedral.

Sights in Lyon

FOURVIERE HILL

Notre-Dame Basilica (Basilique Notre-Dame de Fourvière)

▲▲Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum and Roman Theaters (Lugdunum-Musée and Théâtres)

VIEUX LYON (OLD LYON)

St. Jean Cathedral

Map: Vieux Lyon

▲▲Heart of Vieux Lyon

Gadagne City History and Puppet Museum (Musées Gadagne)

PRESQU’ILE

Place des Terreaux

Atelier de Soierie

Museum of Fine Arts (Musée des Beaux-Arts)

Museums of Textiles and Decorative Arts (Musées des Tissus et des Arts Décoratifs)

Shopping and Eating on the Presqu’île

La Croix-Rousse Walk

Confluence Neighborhood

EAST BANK OF THE RHONE

Resistance and Deportation History Center (Centre d’Histoire de la Résistance et de la Déportation)

Lumière Museum (Musée Lumière)

FOURVIERE HILL

On Fourvière Hill, you can tour the basilica, enjoy a panoramic city view, visit the Roman Theaters and Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum, then catch another funicular back down and explore the old town. I’ve strung the key sights together in a short walking route.

Notre-Dame Basilica (Basilique Notre-Dame de Fourvière)

This ornate, gleaming church fills your view as you exit the funicular. In about the year 1870, the bishop of Lyon vowed to build a worthy tribute to the Virgin Mary if the Prussians spared his city. They did, so construction started in earnest, with more than 2,000 workers on site (similar divine deal-making led to the construction of the basilica of Sacré-Cœur in Paris). Building began in 1872, and the church was ready for worship just in time for the outbreak of the next war, World War I.

Cost and Hours: Free, daily 7:00-19:00.

Church Services: Mass usually at 7:15, 11:00, and 17:30 plus Sun at 9:30 (in the chapel to the right on weekdays; in the basilica on Sat eve and Sun at 9:30 and 17:30).

Rooftop Tours: The lengthy “Original Tour” takes you to the attic and rooftop for splendid views over the city (€10, 1.5 hours, French only, 3-4 tours run daily June-Sept between 11:00-16:00; April-May and Oct-Nov tours run Wed and Sat-Sun only; no tours Dec-March). Check the schedule and reserve online at www.fourviere.org. You can also book at the basilica just before the scheduled tour, but since they’re limited to 18 people, it’s wise to book in advance online.

Visiting the Basilica: Before entering, view the fancy facade, the older chapel on the right (supporting the statue of Mary), and the top of the Eiffel-like TV tower on the left.

Climb the steps and enter. Notice that everything—floor, walls, ceiling—is covered with elaborate mosaics. Scenes glittering on the walls tell stories of the Virgin (in Church history on the left, and in French history on the right). You won’t find a more Mary-centered church. It’s all about our lady—Notre Dame. Amble slowly down the center aisle, enjoy the dazzling neo-Byzantine (late 1800s) decor, and examine these main scenes lining the nave on the left and right:

First Scene (left): In 431, the Council of Ephesus declared Mary to be the “Mother of God.”

First Scene (right): The artist imagines Lugdunum (Lyon)—the biggest city in Roman Gaul, with 50,000 inhabitants—as the first Christian missionaries arrive. The first Christian martyrs in France (killed in AD 177) dance across heaven with palm branches.

Second Scene (left): In 1571, at the pivotal sea battle of Lepanto, Mary provides the necessary miracle as the outnumbered Christian forces beat the Ottomans.

Second Scene (right): Joan of Arc appears in three dramatic scenes. From right to left, she hears messages from Mary; she rallies the French against the English at the Siege of Orléans in 1429 (Joan, with the bright halo, pops on her horse; the timid French King Charles VII—whom Joan inspired to take a stand and fight the English—is buried in the crowd); and Joan is ultimately burned at the stake in Rouen at age 19 (1431).

Third Scene (left): In 1854, Pope Pius I proclaims the dogma of the Immaculate Conception in St. Peter’s Square (establishing the belief among Catholics that Mary was conceived without the “Original Sin” of apple-eating Adam and Eve). To the left of the Pope, angels carry the tower of Fourvière Church; to the right is the image of the Virgin of Lourdes (who miraculously appeared in 1858).

Third Scene (right): Dashing King Louis XIII offers the crown of France heavenward to the Virgin Mary. (The empty cradle between the king and queen hints that while he had Mary on the line, he asked, “Could I please have a son?” Louis XIV was born shortly thereafter.) Above marches a parade of pious French kings and emperors, from Clovis and Charlemagne to Napoleon (on the far right—with the white cross and red coat). Below are the great Marian churches of France (left to right): Chartres; Paris’ Sacré-Cœur, Notre-Dame, and Val-de-Grâce; Reims (where most royalty was crowned); and this church.

These six scenes in mosaic all lead to the altar where Mary reigns as Queen of Heaven.

Lower Church and Adjacent Chapel: Exit under Joan of Arc and descend (passing Hail Marys in a couple dozen languages as you climb down the stairs) to the crypt directly below. There you’ll find a lower church, dedicated to Mary’s earthly husband, Joseph. Priorities here are painfully clear: Money ran out for Joseph’s church. Strolling around Joseph’s church you’ll see models of beloved Marys from around the world (to welcome the many pilgrims), walls lined with plaques thanking Mary for prayers answered, and a rare altar featuring Joseph.

Return up the same stairs, leave the basilica, and step into the adjacent 16th-century chapel to the Virgin (pull the door). Back outside, glance up to see the glorious statue of Mary that overlooks Lyon.

City View: Just around this chapel (past the church museum) is a commanding view of Lyon. Below you lies the old town with its Renaissance roofs sporting uniform chimneys. The peninsula between the two rivers is the Presqu’île, with its elegant and uniform 19th-century architecture.

You can see parts of both rivers and north from the Croix-Rousse district south to Pont Bonaparte, with greater Lyon spread out before you in the distance. The black barrel-vaulted structure to the left is the Opera House, and the rose-colored skyscraper in the distance is called, appropriately, “Le Crayon” (The Pencil). The skyline’s latest addition and tallest building is the tower nicknamed “La Gomme” (The Eraser). The big green space filling the bend in the river beyond the Opera House is Lyon’s massive park (La Tête d’Or). On a clear afternoon, you’ll get a glimpse of Mont Blanc (the highest point in Europe, just left of the pencil-shaped skyscraper).

• To get to the Roman Theaters and Gallo-Roman Museum, walk back to the funicular station and turn left down Rue Roger Radisson. The museum hides in the concrete bunker down the steps, where Rue Roger Radisson meets Rue Cléberg.

▲▲Lugdunum Gallo-Roman Museum and Roman Theaters (Lugdunum-Musée and Théâtres)

The fine Gallo-Roman museum was built on the hillside with views of the two Roman Theaters, and it makes clear Lyon’s importance in Roman times.

Cost and Hours: Museum—€4, includes essential and well-produced audioguide, €7 if special exhibits are on, free first Sun of the month, open Tue-Fri 11:00-18:00, Sat-Sun from 10:00, closed Mon; theaters—free, daily 7:00-19:00, May-Sept until 21:00 except during Les Nuits de Fourvière festival early June-early Aug, when they can close as early as 17:00; 17 Rue Cléberg.

Information: +33 4 72 38 49 30, www.lugdunum.grandlyon.com.

Les Nuits de Fourvière: From early June through early August, the theaters host an open-air festival of concerts, theater, dance, and film. Check programs at the TI and purchase tickets here at the theaters (box office at gate exit toward the Minimes funicular station, Mon-Sat 11:00-18:00, closed Sun), or online at www.nuitsdefourviere.com.

Visiting the Museum and Theaters: Visit the museum first, then tour the theaters.

• Before entering the museum, get an overview of the site by taking a few steps left down Rue Cléberg to find a ramp leading to the museum’s rooftop (open the gate).

From the museum rooftop you can see the two ancient theaters, with the Gallo-Roman forum spread below the basilica. Founded as Lugdunum in AD 43, this city held an estimated 50,000 people—four or five times the population of Roman Paris by the first century. Lyon was a critical transportation hub for the administration of Roman Gaul (and much of what became modern-day France—a lot like today).

The city became the central metropolis of the Three Gauls—the integrated Roman provinces of Aquitania (Aquitaine), Belgica (Belgium), and Lugdunensis (Lyon region)—and Emperors Claudius and Caracalla were both born here in Lyon (for more on the Romans, see “The Romans in Provence” on here). In the third century, Lugdunum’s need for water grew, and the aqueduct system became inadequate. Inhabitants abandoned the high town and, using the original town as a kind of quarry, rebuilt down below along the riverbank.

• Now enter the museum. The route described here gives an overview of the museum’s highlights, which take on more meaning with the excellent audioguide. The collection takes you on a chronological stroll—illustrated with artifacts found in Lyon—down several floors through ancient Lyon.

First is a brief glimpse at prehistoric objects. The unusual remains of a bronze chariot are Celtic (the tribes Rome conquered), dating from the seventh century BC.

Next, dive into the Gallo-Roman rooms. Sit close to the model of Lyon with its hills and rivers and listen on your audioguide to the history of Lugdunum while following its evolution on the model. It was a city of 50,000 in its second-century AD glory days. Gauls and Romans lived and worked side by side in Roman Lyon. Notice that the forum stood where the basilica does today, hanging on the cliff edge. (You’ll see those ruins—across the river—if you follow my walking route of today’s Croix-Rousse neighborhood.)

The curved stones you pass next were arena seats—inscribed with the names of big shots who sat there. Soon after, look for a big, black-bronze tablet and marvel at the amazing penmanship. Carved into it is the transcription of a speech given by Emperor Claudius in AD 48—his (long-winded) account of how he integrated the Gauls into the empire by declaring them eligible to sit in the Roman Senate (also recorded: the interjections of senators begging him to get to the point already—see the English translation behind, on the wall). A few steps farther is a stone Roman pump that looks like an engine block (the TV screen illustrates out how it worked).

Next are displays of Roman coins and tools, a model of a few key Roman buildings in Lyon, and fragments of a second-century AD calendar. Notice how each month is made of two fortnights, how the gods each have their day (like Christian saints would on later calendars), and the tiny holes used so a movable peg could mark the day. A bit farther along, behind the model of the big and small theaters (with originals out the window), check out the mechanics of a Roman theater stage curtain, which was raised instead of lowered. Go ahead...push the button.

The last section of the museum shows how Roman Lyon’s wealthy merchants built large homes with interior courtyards often tiled with mosaics. Ancient amphora (jugs) recall the thriving river trade. Your visit ends with displays on Roman religious life and the arrival of Christianity. Fifth-century tombstones come with early Christian symbolism.

• Take the elevator up to exit the museum, return your audioguide, and enter the Roman Theaters.

The closer big theater was built under the reign of Emperor Augustus and expanded by Hadrian—at its zenith, it could hold 10,000 spectators. Today it seats 3,000 for concerts. The small theater, an “odeon” (from the Greek “ode” for song), was acoustically designed for speeches and songs. The grounds are peppered with gravestones and sarcophagi. Find a seat in the big theater and read the description of Orange’s Roman theater on here for context.

• The ancient road between the Roman Theaters leads down and out, where you’ll find the Minimes funicular station (to the right as you leave). Take the funicular to Vieux Lyon (not St. Just), where it deposits you only a few steps from St. Jean Cathedral. Take some time to explore Vieux Lyon. Or, from the Vieux Lyon funicular stop, you can take Métro line D directly to the Lumière Museum or (with an easy transfer) to the Resistance and Deportation History Center (both described later).

VIEUX LYON (OLD LYON)

These sights can also be connected in a pleasant walk through Lyon’s Renaissance-drenched Old Town. To trace this route, see the map on here.

St. Jean Cathedral

Stand back in the square for the best view of the cathedral (brilliant at night and worth returning for). This mostly Gothic cathedral took 200 years to build. It doesn’t soar as high as its northern French counterparts; influenced by their Italian neighbors, churches in southern France aren’t nearly as vertical as their sisters to the north. This cathedral, the seat of the “primate of the Gauls” (as Lyon’s bishop is officially titled), serves what’s considered the oldest Christian city in France.

Cost and Hours: Free, Mon-Fri 8:15-19:45, Sat-Sun until 19:00.

Facade: Before entering the cathedral, enjoy the carvings decorating the west facade. Nearby Geneva was the epicenter of Calvinism—a radically puritan Reformation sect that forbade images—and (in the 16th century) loved destroying them. As the Calvinist iconoclasts swept into Lyon, the statues on the cathedral were the first to go (notice the empty niches and the headless bodies). They missed some lovely smaller scenes though: Enjoy the intimate details (e.g., Genesis scenes from 15th century) carved into the small panels at eye level just to the right of the central door.

Interior: Notice the beautiful 13th- and 14th-century stained glass in “The Window of Redemption” above the altar. While the medieval faithful would know each scene, 21st-century workers, not so much. The panel to the right of the altar shows how the scenes were replaced in the wrong order after the 2015 restoration.

Under the north (left) transept is a medieval astronomical clock (1383); it has survived wars of all kinds, including the French Revolution. Impressively, its 650-year-old mechanism can compute Catholic holidays, including those that change each year, such as Easter.

Nearby: Outside, take a little detour (make two right turns as you leave) to see the ruins of a mostly 11th-century church, destroyed during the French Revolution when the cathedral was turned into a “temple of reason.” What’s left of a baptistery from an early Christian church (c. AD 400—back when you couldn’t enter a church until you were baptized) is under glass.

▲▲Heart of Vieux Lyon

Vieux (“Old”) Lyon offers the best concentration of well-preserved Renaissance buildings in France. The city grew rich from its trade fairs and banking, and was the center of Europe’s silk industry from the 16th to 19th century. The most prominent vestiges of Lyon’s Golden Age are the elegant pastel buildings of the old center, which were inspired by Italy and financed by the silk industry. Busy Rue St. Jean, leading north from the cathedral to Place du Change, is the main drag. With the rise of Lyon’s popularity with river cruise groups, this area is becoming très touristy. It’s flanked by parallel pedestrian streets (Rue Juiverie and Rue du Bœuf are quieter and more appealing) and punctuated with picturesque squares and courtyards (entrances shown on “Vieux Lyon” map). A fine example of an Italian courtyard can be found at 8 Rue Juiverie. The pedestrian-friendly lanes of Vieux Lyon were made for ambling, window-shopping, and café lingering.

Stroll along Rue St. Jean and take a short detour by making a left up Rue de la Bombarde to the colorful courtyard of...

La Basoche: This beautifully restored Renaissance building gives you a good idea of what hides behind many facades in Vieux Lyon—and a whiff of Lyon’s Golden Age. (Until the Revolution it was the home of a brotherhood of young lawyers.) Check out the black-and-white photos that show this structure before its 1968 renovation, and imagine most of Vieux Lyon in this state.

Back on Rue St. Jean, A La Marquise pastry shop sells Lyon’s dessert specialty: la tarte à la praline, an almond and cream treat with a sugary coating that’s as sweet as it is pink. This is a fine place for a sample (closed Mon-Tue). Continue up Rue St. Jean to #54 where you can push open the heavy doors leading into the longest of Lyon’s many traboules.

Longest Traboule: Stepping off the busy street, you enter a cool and quiet passageway—one of many serpentine traboules (passageways) that link the streets of the old town. The old city’s traboules worked as shortcuts, connecting the old town’s three main north-south streets and providing important shelter from the elements as unfinished silk goods were being moved from one stage of production to the next.

This long traboule links three tiny courtyards and eventually pops out on the next street, Rue du Bœuf, where our walk continues.

Once outside on the small quiet street of Rue du Bœuf, turn right and stroll downhill. You’ll stay on this lane to its end. You’re following what would have been the flow of the neighborhood’s “dirty water”—down the gutter of the lane, which was periodically flushed to the river.

Rue du Bœuf: At #21 is Brochier Soieries, a traditional Lyon silk house since 1890 that sells locally-made silks. Peek through the window to see the “computerized” silk weaving loom (it was all binary), reminiscent of the early Industrial Revolution.

A little further along is Place Neuve St. Jean, a small square created by the demolition of an old building. It’s lined with bouchons (traditional Lyon restaurants).

At #16 you can pop into another branch of the silk house for a free exhibit of silk worms at work (May-Nov only).

The passageway at #16 leads to a charming and peaceful Renaissance courtyard with a rich merchants’ showoff spiral staircase.

• Continue straight down Rue du Bœuf to find (on the left) a Renaissance mansion named for a leading merchant family, Gadagne. It’s home to a double museum, showing puppets and city history. Step into its courtyard to enjoy the scene and consider popping into the museum.

Gadagne City History and Puppet Museum (Musées Gadagne)

This museum (actually two museums with one ticket and the same hours) offers the best look at Lyon’s history and an interactive, kid-friendly look at puppets from around the world. The Lyon History Museum offers a serious swing through the story of Lyon, taking you from the city’s Roman period to the present day—and every era in between. Interesting rooms devoted to its silk industry show looms and sample fabrics. The Puppets of the World Museum celebrates Guignol puppetry, the still-vibrant tradition first created in Lyon by an unemployed silk worker. Here you can see (and play with) examples of beautifully crafted Guignol puppets from around the world.

Cost and Hours: €9, includes audioguide and English brochure, Wed-Sun 11:00-18:30, closed Mon-Tue, 1 Place du Petit Collège, +33 4 78 42 03 61, www.gadagne.musees.lyon.fr. The museum’s pleasant rooftop terrace comes with an inviting café.

• Walk to the end of Rue du Bœuf. At the T-intersection, go right, downhill into...

Place du Change: This was the banking center of medieval Lyon. The city’s finance industry developed after it began hosting trade fairs in 1420. Its centerpiece is France’s first stock exchange, La Loge, which was completely renovated in the 18th century (creating a stark contrast to the Renaissance architecture around it). It’s now a Reformed church.

A short block down (if you were to turn right onto Rue St-Jean again) leads to more puppets, on display and for sale, at Le Petit Musée de Guignol. Otherwise, turning left toward the river below Place du Change, ice-cream connoisseurs must stop at the recommended René Nardone Glacier. From here it’s a short walk north into Presqu’île to Place des Terreaux and the Museum of Fine Arts (cross Pont de la Feuillée and continue straight four blocks).

PRESQU’ILE

Presqu’île literally means “almost an island.” This peninsula between the two rivers is Lyon’s shopping spine, with thriving pedestrian streets (see map on here). The neighborhood’s northern focal point is the...

Place des Terreaux

This stately square hosts the City Hall (Hôtel de Ville), the Museum of Fine Arts, and an action-packed fountain by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi (the French sculptor who designed the Statue of Liberty). The fountain features Marianne (the Lady of the Republic) riding a four-horse-powered chariot, symbolically leading Lyon’s two great rivers to the sea. It was originally destined for the city of Bordeaux, which (ultimately) realized that it could not afford the price tag, so the sculptor shopped it at the 1889 World Expo in Paris. There, Lyon’s mayor fell in love and had to have it. After Bartholdi modified it to fit Lyon’s needs, the massive fountain was installed here in 1891. Originally in the square’s center, it was relocated in 1992 when they built a parking garage below the square (imagine moving this thing).

Atelier de Soierie

This silk workshop, just off Place des Terreaux on Rue Romarin (behind Café le Moulin Joli, a Resistance hangout during World War II), welcomes the public to drop in to see silk printing and screen painting by hand. At one end of the workshop is a wall full of 100-year-old print blocks. At the other is a kitchen cooking up buckets of artfully mixed paint in 20 colors (a nearly lost art that today is performed primarily by machines). Within the shop, you’ll see stretched silk canvases, buckets of dye, and artists in action. Friendly staff members speak some English and are happy to field questions while they work. Climb the staircase to visit a boutique selling handmade silk creations—mostly scarves and ties. Prices range from €25 to €250. A handy brochure explains in English how to tie a scarf French-style.

Cost and Hours: Free entry, Mon-Fri 9:30-13:00 & 14:00-18:30, Sat opens and closes 30 minutes earlier, closed Sun, +33 4 72 07 97 83.

Museum of Fine Arts (Musée des Beaux-Arts)

Located in a former abbey that was secularized by Napoleon in 1803 and made into a public museum, this fine-arts museum has an impressive collection, ranging from Egyptian antiquities to Impressionist paintings. The inner courtyard is a pleasant place to take a peaceful break from city streets. The helpful museum map (pick up when you enter) and audioguide make touring it a pleasure. Plan your arrival carefully, as several key sections close for lunch. A bar/café with calming terrace seating is on the first floor, next to the bookstore.

Cost and Hours: €8, Wed-Mon 10:00-18:00 except Fri from 10:30, closed Tue, audioguide-€1, picnic-perfect courtyard, 20 Place des Terreaux, Métro: Hôtel de Ville, +33 4 72 10 17 40, www.mba-lyon.fr.

Visiting the Museum: After passing the ticket taker, walk up a short flight of stairs to the Chapel, a dreamy Orsay-like display of 19th- and 20th-century statues, including works by Rodin, Carpeaux, and Bartholdi. The next flight of steps leads to Les Antiquités (first floor on map), a fine collection of ancient artifacts (especially Egyptian—the Temple Gate from Medamud is mesmerizing) medieval art, Islamic art, and Art Nouveau (furniture). This first floor is closed 12:30-14:00.

The second floor displays a pretty selection of paintings from the last six centuries (no famous works, but a good Impressionist collection). You’ll see Renaissance and Baroque paintings by Veronese, Cranach, Rubens, and Rembrandt, and Impressionist works by Monet, Manet, Matisse, Pissarro, Gaugin, Cézanne, and more. The small modern art section shows some works by Picasso, Dufy, Léger, and Braque.

The highlight is a series of Pre-Raphaelite-type works called Le Poème de l’Ame (“The Poem of the Soul”), by Louis Janmot (in the Salle Janmot, down a flight of stairs between the Impressionist and France/Europe in 19th-century sections). This cycle of 18 paintings and 16 charcoal drawings traces the story of the souls of a boy and a girl as they journey through childhood, adolescence, and into adulthood. They struggle with fears and secular temptations before gaining spiritual enlightenment on the way to heaven. The boy loses his faith and enjoys a short but delicious hedonistic fling that leads to misery in hell. But a mother’s prayers intercede, and he reunites with the girl to enjoy heavenly redemption.

Museums of Textiles and Decorative Arts (Musées des Tissus et des Arts Décoratifs)

These museums, between Place Bellecour and Perrache station, fill two buildings (sharing a courtyard and connected with an interior hallway). Expect some room closures, as both are undergoing renovation. There is no English information in these museums.

Cost and Hours: €10, covers both museums, Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00, closed Mon, 34 Rue de la Charité, Métro: Bellecour, +33 4 78 38 42 00, www.museedestissus.fr.

Visiting the Museums: The Museum of Textiles was founded in the mid-1800s to “maintain the commercial advantage of Lyon’s silk manufacturers by showing their discerning taste for the arrangements and color settings of original motifs.” It holds arguably the world’s most valuable collection of textiles, going back over 4,000 years and touching all corners of the world. The museum shows off some breathtaking silk work—you’ll see tunics, shawls, dresses, coats, capes, and more from around the world and made from a variety of fabrics.

The Museum of Decorative Arts fills a luxurious mansion and is decorated to the hilt with 18th-century furniture, textiles, and tapestries in a plush domestic setting. Entire rooms from aristocratic Lyonnaise homes have been re-created, including an 18th-century kitchen. There’s plenty of china and a dazzling display of designer teakettles and coffee servers.

Shopping and Eating on the Presqu’île

There’s more to this “almost-an-island” than the sights listed here. Join the river of shoppers on sprawling Rue de la République (north of Place Bellecour) and the teeming and less fancy Rue Victor Hugo pedestrian mall (south of Place Bellecour). Smart clothing boutiques line Rue Président Edouard Herriot. Peruse the bouchons (characteristic bistros—especially characteristic in the evening) of Rue Mercière.

Passage de l’Argue is an Old World, covered shopping passage from the 1800s that predates shopping malls (between 78 Rue Président Edouard Herriot and 43 Rue de Brest). And Grand Café des Négociants is ideal for an indoor break. This grand café, which has been in business since 1864, feels like it hasn’t changed since then, with its soft velvet chairs, painted ceilings, and glass chandeliers (daily, 1 Place Francisque Régaud, near Cordeliers Métro stop, +33 4 78 42 50 05).

For more eating recommendations, see the “Eating in Lyon” section, later.

La Croix-Rousse Walk

This is a mostly straight, downhill stroll along a long, stepped pedestrian lane in the La Croix-Rousse neighborhood. On the 20-minute stroll from top to bottom, you’ll pass hip cafés, art galleries, creative graffiti, and used-clothing shops on your way to the Presqu’île.

Hilly, untouristy, and SoHo-esque, this neighborhood to the north of Presqu’île hummed with some 30,000 silk looms in the 1800s. Today this part of town is popular with Lyon’s bohemian-chic crowd, drawn here by abandoned, airy apartment spaces (built in the age of the Jacquard loom, which required exceptionally high ceilings). The French nickname for this crowd is “Bobo”—bourgeois bohemian—people with money and education but who don’t show it. It’s a progressive and green community, where people eat vegetarian and drive electric cars.

The smartest way to visit the district is to take the Métro to the top (line C to La Croix-Rousse), then follow a series of scenic slopes and stairs back down (see map on here).

Outside the Croix-Rousse stop, a produce market stretches across the square and down Boulevard de la Croix-Rousse (daily except Mon, until about 12:30, best on Sun). The statue at the center of the square is Monsieur Jacquard, inventor of the loom that powered Lyon’s economy in the mid-1800s.

Start your downhill stroll from behind the Métro stop along Rue des Pierres Plantées to a little square with a big view. Pause to appreciate the views from the top of the parklike Montée de la Grande Côte, and notice how the small concrete square may be used as a soccer field, a tricycle track, an outdoor café, and any other purpose the neighbors can find for it. Continue down the stairs, straight through the gardens along the Montée de la Grande Côte and two more stepped blocks. From here, you’ll go down the steps and begin your descent along the straight vertical spine of the neighborhoods. At Rue des Tables Claudiennes, detour a block to the right for a view over the Roman Amphitheater of the Three Gauls. This ruined arena was once the same size as the one in Arles, holding 20,000 spectators. Parts of the arena were destroyed in the 1800s for city development; serious excavation did not begin until the 1960s. Return to the hill and continue your descent. At the end of the street, jog left, and pass through Place des Capucins. Turn left at the Eglise de Scientologie, continue down the stairs, and you end up back in the more high-powered commercial world of the Presqu’île at the stately Place des Terreaux.

Confluence Neighborhood

At the southern tip of the Presqu’île, where the Rhône and Saône rivers converge, you can experience France’s cutting-edge, urban-design energy. Called La Confluence, this expansive urban renewal project (one of Europe’s most ambitious), features futuristic offices, sustainable residential buildings, shopping, and vast public spaces in an area that recently was a vast wasteland. When completed, the Confluence project will double (yes, double) the size of Lyon’s commercial center. While worthwhile for urban design types, this area is of average interest for most travelers.

To reach La Confluence, you can cruise down the Saône River on the shuttle boat Le Vaporetto, from either the northern end of Vieux Lyon or near Pont Bonaparte, to the Confluence shopping mall dock. Here you’ll see the Confluence project’s latest showpiece, the Place Nautique—a pleasure-boat marina.

From the dock, it’s a 15-minute walk along the river (not along the tram route) to the Presqu’île’s southern end and the Musée des Confluences. As you follow the pedestrian walkway you’ll pass revamped dock warehouses, wild-and-crazy office buildings, and restaurant barges. The skippable Musée des Confluences is worth a look from the outside for its daring design. Inside, the permanent collection recounts the sweeping story of human existence (€9, Tue-Fri 11:00-19:00, Thu until 22:00, Sat-Sun 10:00-19:00, closed Mon, 86 Quai Perrache, +33 4 28 38 11 90, www.museedesconfluences.fr).

To return, catch the T1 tram (in front of museum, direction: Feyssine) back to the Confluence mall and board Le Vaporetto to Vieux Lyon, or continue on the T1 to the Perrache stop where you can connect to the Métro and other tram lines (see map on here).

EAST BANK OF THE RHONE

Along with two worthwhile museums, Lyon’s east bank of the Rhône River is a destination itself. The inviting and people-friendly riverside people zone between Pont Lafayette and Pont de la Guillotière is lined with restaurant and bar boats, bike lanes, and a mostly younger crowd enjoying the moment. It’s great for a drink or light meal: Prices are reasonable and the scene is local, laid back, and fun. Foodies will also want to visit the Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse for a lively food market experience (described under “Eating in Lyon,” later).

Resistance and Deportation History Center (Centre d’Histoire de la Résistance et de la Déportation)

This museum gives visitors a thorough understanding of how Lyon became an important city in the Resistance, what life was like for its members, and the clever strategies they employed to fight the Germans. You’ll also learn about the fate of the Jews in Lyon during the war.

Located near Vichy (capital of the French puppet state) and neutral Switzerland, Lyon was the center of the French Resistance from 1942 to 1945. These “underground” Resistance heroes fought the Nazis tooth and nail. Bakers hid radios inside loaves of bread to secretly contact London. Barmaids passed along tips from tipsy Nazis. Communists in black berets cut telephone lines while printers countered Nazi propaganda with anonymous pamphlets. Farmers hid downed airmen in haystacks and housewives spread news from the front with their gossip. Without their bravery, the liberation of France would have been much more difficult.

Cost and Hours: €8, Wed-Sun 10:00-18:00, closed Mon-Tue, audioguide-€1 (also downloadable as an app), 14 Avenue Berthelot, +33 4 78 72 23 11.

Getting There: The easiest way to reach the museum is to ride the Métro to Perrache station, exit the station and cross the tram tracks, and transfer to the T2 tram. You can also take Métro line B to Jean Macé, exit toward the elevated train line, and transfer to the T2 tram (going right). Get off the tram at Centre Berthelot. Otherwise it’s a 20- to 30-minute hike from Place Bellecour.

Visiting the Museum: The museum’s “Lyon, A City at War 1939-1945” exhibit is rich with artifacts. While you can request the binder with English translations, I’d use the excellent audioguide. Visit the 43 displays in numeric order. Everything’s on one floor until the end, where you climb down into a clandestine basement printing office. There are two videos, each with English subtitles (45-minute documentary about Klaus Barbie trial at exhibit start, plays 5 times/day; 10-minute clip on liberation of Lyon at exhibit end, loops continually).

Though these days it’s dedicated to the history of the Resistance, this building actually served as a Nazi torture chamber and Gestapo headquarters under Klaus Barbie (who was finally tried and convicted in 1987 here in Lyon after extradition from Bolivia). More than 11,000 people were killed or deported to concentration camps during his reign.

Lumière Museum (Musée Lumière)

Antoine Lumière and his two sons, Louis and Auguste—the George Eastmans of France—ran a huge factory with 260 workers in the 1880s, producing four million glass photographic plates a day. Then, in 1895, they made the first cinématographe, or movie. In 1903, they pioneered the “autochrome” process of painting frames to make “color photos.” This museum tells their story.

Cost and Hours: €8, Tue-Sun 10:00-18:30, closed Mon, essential audioguide-€3, +33 4 78 78 18 95, www.institut-lumiere.org.

Getting There: Take Métro line D to the Monplaisir-Lumière stop. The museum is in the large mansion with the tiled roof on the square, kitty-corner from the Métro stop at 25 Rue du Premier-Film.

Visiting the Museum: The museum fills Villa Lumière, the family’s belle époque mansion, built in 1902. Many interesting displays and the audioguide do a great job of explaining filmmaking history and the laborious yet fascinating process of creating moving images. You’ll never again take the quality of today’s movies for granted.

Before your visit, pick up the informative museum plan. The museum’s highlights are the many antique cameras (ground floor) and the screens playing the earliest “movies.” The first film reels held about 950 frames, which played at 19 per second, so these first movies were only 50 seconds long. About 1,500 Lumière films are catalogued between 1895 and 1907. The very first movie ever made features workers piling out of the Lumière factory at the end of a workday—mesmerizing in its day not for the plot or action, but simply because of the technology that produced moving images. After their initial success, the Lumières sent cameramen to capture scenes from around the world, connecting diverse cultures and people in a way that had never been done before.

Upstairs are exhibits on still photography and the Lumière living quarters (furnished c. 1900). One room has tablets where you can select movies to watch (notice that each movie is tagged with its “Catalog Lumière” number). The cinema features an hour-long selection of short movies with commentaries, along with recent feature-length films in many languages, including English. Across the park from the mansion is a shrine of what’s left of the warehouse where the first movie was actually shot. In a wonderful coincidence, lumière is the French word for light.

Nightlife in Lyon

Lyon has France’s second-largest cultural budget after Paris, so there are always plenty of theatrical productions and concerts to attend (in French, of course). The TI has the latest information and schedules. From mid-June through mid-September, the terrace-café at the Opera House hosts an outdoor jazz café with free concerts (usually Mon-Sat, www.opera-lyon.com).

After dinner, stroll through Lyon to savor the city’s famous illuminations (see sidebar on here).

For lively bar and people-watching scenes in Presqu’île, prowl Rue de la Monnaie (angles off “restaurant row” Rue Mercière to the south) and the streets between Place des Terreaux and the Opera House. The James Joyce Irish pub, in the heart of Vieux Lyon, is a cozy English-speaking place (daily, 68 Rue St. Jean, +33 4 78 37 84 28).

Sleeping in Lyon

Hotels in Lyon are a steal compared with those in Paris. Weekends are generally discounted (Sundays in particular) in this city that lives off business travelers. Prices rise and rooms disappear when trade fairs are in town, so it’s smart to reserve your room in advance. All my listings are on the Presqu’île except for the youth hostel. Hotels have elevators and air-conditioning—a godsend when it’s hot (hottest June-mid-Sept)—unless otherwise noted. Expect to push buttons to gain access to many hotels.

ON OR NEAR PLACE DES CELESTINS

Book ahead to sleep in this classy yet unpretentious neighborhood (Métro: Bellecour). Just a block off the central Place Bellecour and a block to the Saône River, this area gives travelers easy access to Lyon’s sights. Join shoppers perusing the upscale boutiques, or watch children playing in the small square fronting the Théâtre des Célestins. Warning: Weekend nights can be noisy if you score a room facing Place des Célestins.

$$$ Hôtel Globe et Cecil**** is the most professional and elegant of my listings, with refined comfort on a refined street and a service-oriented staff. Its rooms are tastefully decorated and mostly spacious (good breakfast, 21 Rue Gasparin, +33 4 78 42 58 95, www.globeetcecilhotel.com, accueil@globeetcecilhotel.com).

$$ Hôtel des Artistes,*** ideally located on Place des Célestins, is a comfortable, business-class hotel that offers a fair value on weekdays and a good value on weekends (standard rooms are comfortable but tight, 8 Rue Gaspard-André, +33 4 78 42 04 88, www.hotel-des-artistes.fr, reservation@hotel-des-artistes.fr).

$$ Hôtel des Célestins,*** just off Place des Célestins, is warmly run by Cornell-grad Laurent. Its cheery rooms aren’t cheap but are filled with thoughtful touches. Streetside rooms have more light and are bigger (beautiful suites ideal for families or those in need of room to roam, completely nonsmoking, laundry service, 4 Rue des Archers, +33 4 72 56 08 98, www.hotelcelestins.com, info@hotelcelestins.com).

$ Elysée Hôtel,** a few blocks off Place des Célestins, is a simple little hotel with excellent rates and two-star comfort. Gentle Monsieur Larrive is your host (elevator from first floor up, 92 Rue Président Edouard Herriot, +33 4 78 42 03 15, www.hotel-elysee.fr, accueil@hotel-elysee.fr).

$ Hôtel du Théâtre** has no air-conditioning and requires stamina to reach the lobby, as it’s 40 steps from street level. But the hotel is well-located on Place des Célestins and offers a solid deal. Owners Monsieur and Madame Kuhn run a tight ship, and most of the rooms and bathrooms are spacious and bright (no elevator, 10 Rue de Savoie, enter from hotel’s rear, +33 4 78 42 33 32, www.hotel-du-theatre.fr, contact@hotel-du-theatre.fr).

OTHER PLACES ON THE PRESQU’ILE

$$ Hôtel la Résidence,*** south of Place Bellecour and my closest listing to Perrache station, has 65 plain but good-value rooms. Most are spacious and have high ceilings and bathtub-showers (family rooms, 18 Victor Hugo, +33 4 78 42 63 28, www.hotel-la-residence.com, hotel-la-residence@wanadoo.fr).

$ Le Boulevardier,** a quirky budget option located a few blocks south of Place des Terreaux, has 14 rooms above a nostalgic café. The rooms have character—some with antique furniture and toys, and others with church views (larger rooms worth the extra euros, no air-con but fans, 5 Rue de la Fromagerie, +33 4 78 28 48 22, www.leboulevardier.fr, hotelboulevardier@gmail.com).

HOSTEL

¢ Auberge de Jeunesse HI Lyon is impressively situated—it’s only a 10-minute steep walk above Vieux Lyon. Open daily (except 13:00-14:00 & 20:00-21:00), it has a lively common area with kitchen access and a snack bar (includes breakfast, book only through website, small safes available, 45 Montée du Chemin Neuf, Métro: Vieux Lyon, or take funicular to Minimes, exit station and make a left U-turn, then follow station wall downhill to Montée du Chemin Neuf; +33 4 78 15 05 50, www.hihostels.com, lyon@hifrance.org).

Eating in Lyon

Dining is a ▲▲▲ attraction in Lyon and, compared to Paris, the value is good. Half the fun is joining the procession of window shoppers mulling over where they’ll dîner ce soir. In the evening, the city’s population seems to double as locals emerge to stretch their stomachs. The tried-and-true salade lyonnaise (usually filling) followed by quenelles (dumplings) is a classic Lyon meal. (While the quenelle is a local favorite, for some it’s just a big doughy dumpling.) You won’t want dessert.

Lyon’s characteristic bouchons are small bistros that evolved from the days when Mama would feed the silk workers after a long day. True bouchons are simple places with limited selection and seating (“just like Mama’s”), serving only traditional fare and special 46-centiliter pot (pron. “poh”) wine pitchers. The lively pedestrian streets of Vieux Lyon and Rue Mercière on the Presqu’île are bouchon bazaars, worth strolling even if you dine elsewhere. Though food quality may be better away from these popular restaurant rows, you can’t beat the atmosphere. Many of Lyon’s restaurants close on Sunday and Monday and during August, except along Rue Mercière. If you plan to dine somewhere special, reserve ahead (ask your hotelier for help).

IN OR NEAR VIEUX LYON

Come to Vieux Lyon for a charming atmosphere. For the epicenter of restaurant activity, go to Place Neuve St. Jean, and survey the scene and menus before sitting down. Most of these places are located on the map on here.

$$$ Daniel et Denise is formal, dressy, and worth booking ahead. Reputed chef Joseph Viola has created a buzz by providing wonderful cuisine at affordable prices in a classic bouchon setting (indoor seating only, closed Mon, 36 Rue Tramassac, +33 4 78 42 24 62, www.danieletdenise.fr).

$$ Café Restaurant du Soleil serves Lyon’s tastiest quenelles, offering five types, including the traditional brochet (pike), scallops (my favorite), and original varieties made with wild garlic. The atmosphere and setting, both inside and out, is unforgettable (daily, 2 Rue Saint Georges, +33 4 78 37 60 02).

$ Les Lyonnais is a block off the Rue du Bœuf action, making it a bit quieter. Its lighthearted interior has rich colors, wood tables, and a photo gallery of loyal customers. Stéphane runs the place with grace, offering a good €25 menu with salade lyonnaise and quenelles, or fine and filling €14 salads (closed Mon, small terrace, 1 Rue Tramassac, +33 4 78 37 64 82).

$$ Les Retrouvailles serves tasty, more modern Lyonnaise cuisine in a charming setting under wood-beam ceilings with an open kitchen. Tables are grouped around a central buffet displaying delectable desserts. Your dining experience is thoughtfully overseen by owners Pierre (le chef) and Odile (indoor dining only, dinner only, closed Sun, 38 Rue du Bœuf, +33 4 78 42 68 84).

Ice Cream: René Nardone Glacier, with pleasant outdoor seating on the river near Place du Change, serves up some of Lyon’s best ice cream, made fresh daily next door. Ask Armelle about her peanut ice cream (May-Sept daily 8:30-24:00, off-season 9:00-20:00, 3 Place Ennemond Fousseret).

ON THE PRESQU’ILE

The pedestrian Rue Mercière is the tourist-friendly epicenter of bouchons on the Presqu’île. Along this street, an entertaining cancan of restaurants stretches four blocks from Place des Jacobins to Rue Grenette. Enjoy surveying the scene and choose whichever eatery appeals. See the map on here for locations.

Near the Museum of Fine Arts

$$ Le Bouchon des Filles is a cozy, traditional bouchon on a quiet street where the two “filles” (“girls”) offer a good-value menu including a cheese course (open daily for dinner plus Fri-Sun for lunch, reservations recommended, 20 Rue Sergent Blandan, +33 4 78 30 40 44, www.lebouchondesfilles.com).

On or near Rue Mercière

$ Bistrot à Tartines/L’Epicerie is a young and fun place for tasty tartines (big slice of bread topped with goodies) offered at unbeatable prices by a friendly staff. You can split a tartine and save money (and room for their popular desserts). The interior, which feels like an antique general store, has good seating inside and out (daily, food served all day, 2 Rue de la Monnaie, +33 4 78 37 70 85).

$ L’Arbre à Thé provides a break in this meat-loving city, with light quiches, salads, and great desserts. This cute and quaint tea salon is convenient for lunch or an early dinner (Tue-Sat 11:30-19:00, closed Sun-Mon, 4 Rue du Petit David, +33 4 72 40 06 68).

$$ Bistrot de Lyon, famed chef-owner Jean-Paul Lacombe’s least-expensive establishment, feels touristy but still bustles with authentic, circa-1900 Lyonnaise atmosphere and reliable cuisine (€22 quenelles, €13 salade lyonnaise, open daily, 64 Rue Mercière, +33 4 78 38 47 47).

$$ L’Harmonie des Vins is a convivial wine bar/bistro that oozes character and warmth, with a long zinc counter and stone walls under heavy beams, a good selection of local dishes, and a great selection of wines by the glass or bottle (closed Sun-Mon, 9 Rue Neuve, +33 4 72 98 85 59).

Refined Dining

$$$ Archange is a softly lit, white-tablecloth place accommodating 26 happy diners, all eager to sample the popular chef’s creations that infuse a hint of Asian influence with refined French cuisine (menus only—no à la carte). Ask your hotelier to book your table ahead (dinner and indoor seating only, closed Mon, near Place des Terreaux at 6 Rue Hippolyte Flandrin, +33 4 78 28 32 26).

$$$ Brasserie le Sud is one of four places in Lyon where you can sample the cuisine of the late legendary chef Paul Bocuse at affordable prices. His brasseries feature international cuisine from different parts of the world (each named for the corner it represents—north, south, east, and west). Le Sud is the most accessible, with a sunny Mediterranean menu and feel. It’s dressy, with three dining zones: bright and spacious inside, under a big awning, and outside facing a big modern square. With professional service, nicely presented and reliably tasty dishes, and great prices, it’s understandably popular. While the prix fixe menus are the most economical, order à la carte to enjoy the full range of the kitchen (daily, reservations recommended, 11 Place Antonin-Poncet, a few blocks off Place Bellecour, +33 4 72 77 80 00, www.nordsudbrasseries.com).

ON THE EAST BANK OF THE RHONE

Les Halles de Lyon Paul Bocuse

As a cuisine capital, Lyon has a thriving market to serve its many creative chefs. The modern Les Halles is away from the normal tourist action, but foodies and market enthusiasts enjoy a visit or a meal here. It’s a complete food festival—crammed with butchers, fishmongers, pastry specialists, cheese shops, and colorful produce stands, with food stands and mini restaurants mixed in. For a memorable lunch or early-by-French-standards dinner, drop by and survey your many dining options (indoor and outdoor, daily 11:00-14:30, also Wed-Sat 18:00-21:00; take T1 tram to Part Dieu-Servient stop, walk to Rue Garibaldi, and turn right—it’s under a round concrete structure at 102 Cours Lafayette).

Lyon Connections

After Paris, Lyon is France’s most important rail hub. Train travelers find this gateway to the Alps, Provence, the Riviera, and Burgundy an easy stopover. And now the Eurostar connects Lyon with London in a little over five hours.

Two main train stations serve Lyon: Part-Dieu and Perrache. Most trains officially depart from Part-Dieu, though many also stop at Perrache, and trains run between the stations (service can be infrequent). Double-check your train’s departure station.

From Lyon by Train to: Paris (hourly, 2 hours), Annecy (10/day, 2 hours; also 6/day by bus, 2.5 hours), Chamonix (6/day, 5-6 hours, several changes), Strasbourg (7/day, 4 hours), Dijon (hourly, 2 hours), Beaune (hourly, 2 hours), Avignon (hourly, 70 minutes, slower to Centre-Ville station), Arles (hourly, 3 hours, most change in Avignon, Marseille, or Nîmes), Nice (6/day, 4.5 hours), Carcassonne (4/day, 4 hours), Venice (2/day, 9 hours, change in Turin), Rome (3/day, 9 hours, change in Milan or Turin), Florence (4/day, 8-12 hours), Geneva (8/day, 2 hours), Barcelona (1/day direct, 5 hours, more with change in Perpignan, Narbonne, or Valence), London (1/day “direct” but border check at Lille, 5.5 hours on Eurostar, more with easy change in Lille).

From Lyon by Bus: Blablabus and Flixbus leave from Perrache station (and the airport).

Near Lyon: The Rhône Valley

The Rhône Valley is the narrow part of the hourglass that links the areas of Provence and Burgundy. The region is bordered to the west by the soft hills of the Massif Central, and with the rolling foothills of the Alps just to the east, it’s the gateway to the high Alps (the region is called Rhône-Alpes). The mighty Rhône River rumbles through the valley from its origin in the Swiss Alps to its outlet 500 miles away in the Mediterranean near Arles.

Vineyards blanket the western side of the Rhône Valley, from those of the Beaujolais just north of Lyon to the steep slopes of Tain-Hermitage below Lyon. On the eastern side of the river and closer to Avignon are the vineyards of the famous Côtes du Rhône.

The Rhône Valley has always provided the path of least resistance for access from the Mediterranean to northern Europe, and today, Roman ruins litter the valley between Lyon and Orange.

BEAUJOLAIS WINE ROUTE

Between Lyon and Mâcon (near Cluny, in Burgundy), the Beaujolais region makes for an appealing detour, thanks to its beautiful vineyards and villages and easygoing wine tasting (for more on Beaujolais wines, see here).

The Beaujolais wine road starts 45 minutes north of Lyon and runs from Villefranche-sur-Saône to Mâcon. The Route du Beaujolais winds up, down, and around the hills just west of the A-6 autoroute and passes through Beaujolais’ most important villages: Chiroubles, Fleurie, Chénas, and Juliénas. Look for Route du Beaujolais signs, and expect to get lost more than a few times (Lyon’s TI has a route map, and you can check there for more information).

Note that while Villefranche-sur-Saône may be the Beaujolais capital, it’s an unappealing city that’s best avoided. Focus your time on the small villages and look for dégustation (tasting) signs.

From Lyon to Mâcon: To enjoy the best of this wine route, start by making your way to the hill of Fleurie with its chapel and viewpoint, then pass Moulin à Vent’s famous vineyards and see its trademark windmill. In Juliénas, the old church has been transformed into a cellar and tasting room and is used as a bar by the locals. You’ll find more serious wines at Le Château de Juliénas, an authentic castle with impressive vaulted cellars (www.chateaudejulienas.com). If it’s lunchtime, enjoy the convivial atmosphere of $$ Joséphine à Table in the village of Saint-Amour, which is also home to a Michelin-star restaurant. It’s the local winemakers’ hangout; arrive early or reserve a day before (closed Sun-Mon, +33 3 85 37 10 26, www.josephineatable.fr).

Continuing north, you’ll enter the Mâconnais white wine region, passing signs to the famous villages of Pouilly and Fuissé as you near Mâcon. The 45-minute hike to the 1,600-foot-high Solutré Rock (a prehistoric site) offers grandiose views over the Saône valley, vineyards, and the twin shorter sister Vergisson Rock.

For a high-priced but thorough introduction to this region’s wines, visit Le Hameau Dubœuf in Romanèche-Thorins. The king of Beaujolais, Georges Dubœuf, has constructed a Disney-esque introduction to wine at his museum, which immerses you in the life of a winemaker and features impressive models, exhibits, films, and videos. You’ll be escorted from the beginning of the vine to present-day winemaking, with a focus on Beaujolais wines. It also has a lovely garden with fragrant flowers, fruits, herbs, and spices that represent the rich aromas present in wine (€20, keep receipt for discount if you intend to visit the Abbey of Cluny—see here, includes a small tasting, free English headphones and a petit train ride, plan to spend half a day, daily 10:00-18:00; in Romanèche-Thorins, follow signs labeled Le Hameau Dubœuf from D-306, then La Gare signs, and look for the old train-station-turned-winery; +33 3 85 35 22 22, www.hameauduvin.com).

Train Alternative: Without a car, consider seeing the wine route by train. Trains between Lyon and Mâcon stop at several wine villages, including Romanèche-Thorins (6 trains/day from Lyon).

Sleeping on the Beaujolais Wine Route: A French couple who lived in the US for over a decade, Virginie (who also leads tours for my company) and Olivier rent three rooms at $ L’Esprit des Vignes, with scenic views over the Saône valley and Mont Blanc. It’s located 20 minutes south of Cluny and two miles from Juliénas (includes breakfast, ask about homemade dinners and nearby train station pickup, Virginie also offers day trips and wine tastings, mobile +33 6 52 90 88 61, www.lespritdesvignes.fr, virginie@lespritdesvignes.fr).