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MONACO
Monstrosities are common on the Côte d'Azur,
but nowhere – not even Cannes – can outdo MONACO.
This tiny independent principality, no bigger
than London's Hyde Park, has lived off gambling
and catering for the desires of the idle international
rich for the last hundred years.
Meanwhile, it has become one of the greatest property
speculation sites in the world – a sort of low-rise
Manhattan-on-Sea with an incredibly dense concentration
of fin-de-siècle Edwardian hotels standing in
for the skyscrapers. The principality has been
in the hands of the ruling Grimaldi family since
the thirteenth century, and legally Monaco would
once again become part of France were the royal
line to die out.
The current ruler, Prince Rainier, is the one
constitutionally autocratic ruler left in Europe,
under whose nose every French law is passed for
approval prior to being applied to Monaco. There
is a parliament, but with limited functions and
elected only by Monegasque nationals – about sixteen
percent of the population. But there is no opposition
to the ruling family.
The citizens and non-French residents pay no income
tax and their riches are protected by rigorous
security forces; Monaco has more police per square
metre than any other country in the world. One
time to avoid Monaco – unless you're a motor-racing
enthusiast – is the last week in May, when racing
cars burn around the port and casino for the Formula
1 Monaco Grand Prix. Every space in sight of the
circuit is inaccessible without a ticket, making
casual sightseeing out of the question.
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