Lyon
Lyon, which is on the UNESCO World Heritage List, is rich with historical and cultural landmarks that date back to the Roman Empire. The city's museums have enough to offer visitors, who may keep themselves warm indoors during the winter. The Musée des Beaux-Arts houses sculptures, antiquities, decorative arts, graphic arts, and masterpieces of European painting from the 15th to the 20th centuries.
Visitors to Lyon can experience what it was like to live in the old Roman city by visiting the Musée de la Civilisation Gallo-Romaine. Due to its strategic location near the farms of the Auvergne and Provence, the cheesemakers of the Alps, and the celebrated gastronomic tradition of France, Lyon is honored in this heritage and is commonly regarded as the capital of French cuisine. La Meunière, located in the center of the Presqu'île district; La Tête de Lard, also in the first arrondissement; Aux Trois Cochons, close to Place Bellecour; the Café de Jura, a family-run Bouchon that first opened in 1867; and Daniel et Denise, located in the Croix-Rousse district, the former silk workers' quarter, are among the famous bistros you can visit.