Sure. Paris has many famous cemeteries such as Pere Lachaise- which means, Father, The Chair! ( maybe he was a prison chaplain!)= I mean FR. Lachaise, not Quasimodo!
Yes, it is real and is reserved for military veterans.
No. The Hunchback of Notre Dame is a work of fiction. While the Notre Dame cathedral is real, the events and people of the story are not. As such, the story does not indicate anything real about the nature of Notre Dame.
no.
Yes. That's where people came to visit and honor those military soldiers.
no.a pet cemetery is a place that you can bring your pet when it dies and you can put it in a grave there,and visit whenever you want to.
Briar Rose is her 'poor' name in disney film, while Aurora is her princess and real name
Yes, it exists. There is a cemetery and a national park there to commemorate the battle.
Quasimodo is a real word, and I'm not just referring to the famous hunchback. It is a word from the Roman Catholic calendar. See links.
I am 11 and no stuff they talk it`s DISNEY!
Mark Twain, whose real name was Samuel Clemens, was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in Elmira, New York. His grave site overlooks the Chemung River.
Maybe in your bedroom or a cemetery at midnight or any other place where you'd expect to finds ghosts.
The character of Quasimodo is indeed based on a real person; a hunchback who lived in Paris in the 1820's and was seen working in the cathedral. The discovery of the real Quasimodo, or, more likely, just Victor Hugo's inspiration for the character, was made by the British archivist Adrian Glew. Glew was studying the sculptor Henry Sibson's autobiography and suddenly came across a description of a hunchbacked man working in the cathedral, chopping stone. This hunchback can very well have been Victor Hugo's (the author of the novel "The Hunchback of Notre Dame", in French "Notre Dame de Paris") inspiration for the hunchbacked main character Quasimodo. It is commonly known that Hugo very often came to the cathedral to seek inspiration for his novel, which he started writing in 1829. Henry Sibson never spoke to the hunchback, and the real Quasimodo's name remains unknown. It is also yet to be discovered whether the hunchback also worked as a bell ringer, or if he was just hired to help with the renovation. Bonus info: Henry Sibson's autobiography mentions the name of another sculptor, Trajan. The Parisian archives confirms Trajan as a sculptor in the 1820's, which strengthens the reliability of Sibson's autobiography. Furthermore, Trajan might have been another one of Hugo's inspirations: In an early version of Hugo's "Les Miserables", the main character Jean Valjean is called Jean Trajean, maybe inspired by this other sculptor from Sibson's autobiography.