| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| On mentioned square stands a statue of this "woman", a personification of France and secular godess of liberty. | Marianne | 100%
|
| The Hôtel Salé hosts a museum dedicated (mostly) to this Spanish painter (1881-1973). | Pablo Picasso | 100%
|
| 11th quartier of Paris, named after an institution responsible for storing historical documents | des Archives | 67%
|
| 9th quartier of Paris, named after an elite school (or grande école) | des Arts et Métiers | 67%
|
| Historic district that spreads into the 4th arrondissement and has been a center for Jewish and gay life. It literally means "The Marsh". | Le Marais | 67%
|
| French king who in 1792 was held prisoner in a fortress formerly belonging to mentioned order. His son would die there three years later under dubious circumstances. | Louis XVI. | 67%
|
| Together with the 1st, 2nd and 4th arrondissement, the 3rd has been part of this administrative division since 2020 | Paris Centre | 67%
|
| The alchemist Nicholas Flamel lived in what is now the 3rd. He allegedly discovered this magic object, which turns base materials into gold (and is featured in a Harry Potter story). | Philosopher's Stone | 67%
|
| Square bordering the 4th and 10th arrondissement that is a popular setting for demonstrations. It received its current name on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the French Revolution, in 1879. | Place de la {République} | 67%
|
| The name of the 3rd derives from the fact that a famed order of knights, originally founded in Jerusalem, had a base here | Temple | 67%
|
| 10th quartier of Paris | des Enfants-Rouges | 33%
|
| Museum dedicated to the history of Paris. Its name comes from a mispronounciation of the original owner's Breton name Kernevenoy. | Musée Carnavalet | 33%
|
| 12th quartier of Paris | Sainte-Avoye | 0%
|