Don’t be alarmed today if you see a red-white-and-blue-clad mime cheering for Les Bleus. It doesn’t mean you’ve missed the World Cup Final, but instead have stumbled into a Bastille Day celebration.
Bastille Day is France’s national day, marking the beginning of republican democracy. If you haven’t read Charles Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities since high school and couldn’t afford tickets to the last touring production of Les Miserables, here’s a refresher on the French history that led to the annual champagne-and-chèvre-filled party on July 14:
To celebrate Bastille Day, wave a tricolor flag and sing “La Marseillaise,” because both originated from the revolution. France marks Bastille Day with fireworks, family parties, and a grand parade down the Champs-Élysée–the oldest military parade in the world, dating back to Bastille Day 1880.
Or if you’re celebrating at home, learn to say the French republic’s national motto–“liberté, egalité, fraternité“–with a convincing French accent.
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