Gratis
Apoyo
1 pièces bâton de tige droite Ultra-léger Portable canne de marche rétractable en alliage d'aluminium 5 sections bâton de marche
How does Share Ride work? If you are going to JFK airport: The driver picks up passengers in order from the destinations furthest from the airport to the closest. Your pick-up time will depend on the relationship between your location and how many other share passengers will be picked up and their respective locations. If you are the furthest away from the airport, you will be picked up relatively early to your flight time and will have to visit other locations to pick up share passengers before arriving at the airport. We guarantee that you will arrive to the airport on time. Please remember to allow for sufficient travel time to JFK Airport. Please take traffic into consideration when booking your reservation. Please keep in mind that they cannot control traffic, flight delays and other unforeseen circumstances that may increase travel time. Go Airlink NYC JFK Airport share-ride shuttles: Up to 11 passengers. Share ride shuttle with other travelers, allows you to meet new people and socialize! Economical, environmentally friendly. 24 hour/ 7 days a week transportation service. Door to door service Baggage allowance: 1 Suitcase per person and 1 small carry-on per person.
Bitte beachten Sie weiterhin:
Nach der Tour können die Kunden noch etwas länger im Museum bleiben, etwas essen oder Andenken wie Drucke von Gemälden oder Bücher kaufen
Obligatorische Garderobe für große Taschen, Kinderwagen, Sonnenschirme, etc.
Diese Tour ist nicht für Personen mit eingeschränkter Mobilität geeignet (Tour zu Fuß)
Der Tourenplan beinhaltet keinen Aufzug
Das Louvre Museum schließt mittwochs und freitags um 22.00 Uhr und an anderen Tagen der offenen Tür um 18.00 Uhr
Alle Audioführer müssen nach der Tour zurückgegeben werden
Überspringen Sie die Warteschlange mit diesem Ticket und erhalten Sie schnell Zugang zum weltberühmten Louvre-Museum, das sich im Herzen von Paris am Ufer der Seine befindet.
Der Louvre war früher eine Residenz des Königs von Frankreich und ist heute das meistbesuchte Museum in Paris und eines der weltweit Bekanntesten. Bewundern Sie die Glaspyramide am 1988 eingeweihten Museumseingang. Hier können Sie die Hauptlobby direkt erreichen.
Ihr Ticket bietet Ihnen einen offenen Zugang zu Kunstwerken verschiedener Stilrichtungen aus verschiedenen Epochen, die in zahlreichen Ländern der Welt erschaffen wurden. Darunter finden Sie:
- Die Mona Lisa, Leonardo Da Vincis berühmtestes Werk und ein Porträt von Francesco del Giocondos Frau, Lisa Gherardini
- Venus de Milo, eine Skulptur, die die Gottheit Aphrodite darstellt - oder Venus in der römischen Mythologie -, die in den Kykladen entdeckt wurde
- Geflügelte Siegesgöttin von Samothrake, eine griechische Skulptur, die die Gottheit Nike darstellt, posierte auf einem Schiffsbug
- Die Ehe in Cana ist das größte Gemälde im Louvre. Das Werk von Paul Véronèse zeigt Christus, wie er bei einer Hochzeit Wasser in Wein verwandelt
- Die Krönung Napoleons ist ein Gemälde, das die Krönung Napoleons I. und der Kaiserin Josephine in der Kathedrale Notre-Dame darstellt
- Das Floß der Medusa ist ein Gemälde von Théodore Géricault, das die schiffbrüchige Fregatte Medusa zeigt, die 1816 in Mauretanien an Land gespült wurde
Pochette de ceinture en cuir pour hommes sac banane pochette de téléphone avec boucle de ceinture
Journey with our member of the ICA (Irish Citizen Army) as he tells you about the devastating effects of the 1913 Lockout such as seeing children dying of starvation in the tenements. Learn how he and countless others were left jobless, oppressed and craving social change, especially after Ireland suffered the violence of its first Bloody Sunday. Listen, as he does, to James Connolly and the social leaders who promised change and a brighter future if they followed them into battle for it. Meet our member of the Cumann na mBan (the women’s faction of the Irish Volunteers) who was so moved by Padraig Pearse’s graveside speech at the funeral of the famous Fenian Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa in 1915 she signed up the following day. Discover the key and dangerous roles these women, numbering nearly a quarter of those who rose that week, played in the battles that Easter. In the reading of the 1916 Proclamation of Independence and in their own words hear how they were fighting not only for the emancipation of Ireland but for a better future for Irish women. On the 1916 Rise of the Rebels Tour you will travel with our two rebels as they take you through the action all over the city during Easter week. See and hear about the sites where it all happened, some you may know and some whose histories have been less explored until now. From one of The Abbey Theatre’s leading actors, Sean Connolly, leading the first charge and firing the first shots of the Rising; resulting in the first casualty at City Hall as the rebels tried to take Dublin Castle. To Richmond Barracks where all the captured rebels plus many who were falsely accused of being so were imprisoned before the executions in Kilmainham. In-between discover where the fiercest battles were fought including The Four Courts and South Dublin Union. Hear the testimonies of the brave and brazen, such as the handful of men who took on the might of a battalion around Mount Street, and the women who dodged bullets to deliver messages all over the city. Then there are the stories of the trenches and strange amnesties in the gunfire torn St. Stephens Green and the dangerous women who patrolled its gates. Come with us to the GPO, The General Post Office, which acted as the headquarters for the rebels during the week of The 1916 Easter Rising. It was outside here that Padraig Pearse read out The Proclamation of Independence and decreed a free and equal Ireland for all. Inside Pearse along with 4 of the other signatories of the Proclamation, James Connolly, Tom Clarke, Sean MacDiarmada and Joseph Plunkett orchestrated the insurrection as bullets rained down upon the building. See the bullet holes that are still visible scars on the GPO today. At the end of the week they tunnelled their way through the homes on neighbouring Moore Street to escape the burning GPO as shells from the gunship Helga blasted them and the flames around them raged so hot the glass inside was melting. Follow the path of the doomed revolutionaries as they ran the gauntlet under heavy machine gun fire to Moore Street and visit the site of one of The Rising’s most tragic deaths, that of The O’Rahilly. It was here around Moore Street where The O’Rahilly penned his last goodbyes to his wife and hiding inside its beleaguered walls the remaining rebels decided to surrender. The 1916 Rise of Rebels Bus Tour will show you the heart of the rebellion using the actual words and testimonies of the men and women who fought for Irish Independence in the 1916 Easter Rising.