Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Paris, France

    Mostly Clear, 2:55 AM

    Mostly Clear icon
    63
    • Precipitation: 0%
    • Humidity: 65%
    • Wind: 7 mph
    • 5362717778736460

    More from Yahoo Weather

    Powered by AccuWeather logo

  2. Climate of Paris. Paris has a typical oceanic climate ( Köppen climate classification: Cfb ), affected by the North Atlantic Current. The overall climate throughout the year is mild and moderately wet. [1] Summer days are usually warm and pleasant with average temperatures between 15 and 25 °C (59 and 77 °F), and a fair amount of sunshine. [2]

    Month
    Jan
    Feb
    Mar
    Record high °C (°F)
    16.1 (61.0)
    21.4 (70.5)
    26.0 (78.8)
    Mean daily maximum °C (°F)
    7.6 (45.7)
    8.8 (47.8)
    12.8 (55.0)
    Daily mean °C (°F)
    5.4 (41.7)
    6.0 (42.8)
    9.2 (48.6)
    Mean daily minimum °C (°F)
    3.2 (37.8)
    3.3 (37.9)
    5.6 (42.1)
  3. The average wind speed is 14 kph (8 mph). July, the warmest month of the year, is generally a warm month. The average temperature is of 20.5 °C (69 °F), with a minimum of 14.7 °C (58.5 °F) and a maximum of 26.3 °C (79.4 °F). On the coldest nights of the month, the temperature usually drops to around 9.5 °C (49 °F).

    • Overview
    • Climate of Paris
    • City layout

    In its location on the western side of Europe and in a plain relatively close to the sea, Paris benefits from the balmy influences of the Gulf Stream and has a fairly temperate climate. The weather can be very changeable, however, especially in winter and spring, when the wind can be sharp and cold. The annual average temperature is in the lower 50...

    In its location on the western side of Europe and in a plain relatively close to the sea, Paris benefits from the balmy influences of the Gulf Stream and has a fairly temperate climate. The weather can be very changeable, however, especially in winter and spring, when the wind can be sharp and cold. The annual average temperature is in the lower 50...

    Over the centuries, as Paris expanded outward from the Île de la Cité, various walls were built to enclose parts of the city. After the Roman town on the Left Bank was sacked by barbarians in the 3rd century ce, the fire-blackened stones were freighted across to the Île de la Cité, where a defensive wall was constructed. Neglected in times of peace, it was rebuilt several times over the course of the centuries. The earliest of the bridges to the Left Bank, the Petit Pont (Little Bridge), which has been rebuilt several times, was guarded by a fortified gate, the Petit Châtelet (châtelet meaning a small castle or fortress). The bridge to the Right Bank, the Pont au Change (Exchange Bridge), was guarded by the Grand Châtelet, which served as a fort, prison, torture chamber, and morgue until it was demolished in 1801.

    From 1180 to 1225 King Philip II built a new wall that protected the settlements on both banks. In 1367–70 the Right Bank enclosure was enlarged by Charles V, with the massive Bastille fortress protecting the eastern approaches as the Louvre fortress protected the west. In 1670 Louis XIV had the Charles V walls replaced by the tree-planted Grands Boulevards, embellished at the Saint-Denis Gate (Porte Saint-Denis) and the Saint-Antoine Gate (Porte Saint-Antoine) with triumphal arches; the Saint-Denis arch still stands. (The word boulevard, related to “bulwark,” originally was a military engineering term for the platform of a defensive wall.) Imitating the arch of the river, the Grands Boulevards still stretch from the present-day Place de la Madeleine north and east to the present-day Place de la République.

    In the second half of the 18th century, a new wall was begun. The wall was built with 57 tollhouses to enable the farmers-general, a company of tax “farmers,” or collectors, to collect customs duties on goods entering Paris. The tollhouses are still standing at Place Denfert-Rochereau.

    The last wall, built in the mid-19th century by Adolphe Thiers for King Louis-Philippe, was a genuine military installation with outlying forts. By the time it was finished, it enclosed a number of hamlets outside Paris, among them Auteuil, Passy, Montmartre, La Villette, and Belleville.

    The rebuilding and economic recovery that occurred after the collapse of Napoleon III’s Second Empire in 1870, along with the expansion of employment provoked by the Industrial Revolution, drew more and more people to Paris—with ever-increasing facility as railways developed. Between 1852 and 1870 the city planner Baron Haussmann razed the walls of the farmers-general and built a number of wide, straight boulevards that cut through the city’s mass of narrow streets. The 19th-century walls were eventually knocked down, and the boulevards were extended in 1925.

    Today Paris’s many boulevards, old buildings, monuments, gardens, plazas, and bridges compose one of the world’s grandest cityscapes. Much of central Paris was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1991.

  4. Climate & Weather Averages in Paris, Paris, France. Weather Today Weather Hourly 14 Day Forecast Yesterday/Past Weather Climate (Averages) Currently: 52 °F. Passing clouds. (Weather station: Villacoublay, France). See more current weather.

  5. The climate here is mild, and generally warm and temperate. The rainfall in Paris is significant, with precipitation even during the driest month. The Köppen-Geiger climate classification identifies this particular weather pattern as belonging to the category of Cfb. The average annual temperature is 11.7 °C | 53.0 °F in Paris.

  6. From June to September, the average temperatures are minimum 55°F (13°C) and maximum 77°F (25°C). Sometimes it can get up to 86°F (30°C), but rarely. However, the heat in this city is humid and it can be oppressive to wander the streets of Paris during the hottest days.

  7. Dec 14, 2020 · Typically, the best time to visit Paris is from May through mid-September. Mid-May through June is especially pleasant, with long days and milder temperatures. Spring, while beautiful, can be quite chilly. Read on for more information about Paris's climate as well as a season-by-season breakdown of the weather. Fast Climate Facts.

  1. People also search for