Water Tower Place Royale du Peyrou. After lunch at one of the terraces of the restaurants that are in one of the squares of the "rue de la Loge", we headed towards the "Rue Foch," with prominent nineteenth-century buildings and many "boutiques. "At the end of the Avenue Foch find the Arc de Triomphe, the Gate of Peyrou (1691), designed in the Doric style with reliefs glorifying later King Louis XIV of France. The Arc de Triomphe, the Avenue Foch joins the "park Peyrou", a large green space located in the heart of the historic center of Montpellier. Inside the park, in addition to the gardens, include the equestrian statue of Louis XIV, "le château d'eau" (water tower) and "Arceaux" (The aqueduct of San Clemente - XVII century, with a length of 880m and two orders of arcades, run by the Las Arceaux and used to carry water from the source of San Clemente, 14 km from the city). We left the park and look Peyrou left the "Boulevard Henri IV" will enable us to reach the "Rue de l'Ecole de Médecine", where the "Faculté de Médecine". The Faculty of Medicine is the oldest in operation in the world. In practice there since the twelfth century, though its institutional framework first won in 1220. Among other famous people were studied such as Nostradamus, François Rabelais, Arnau de Vilanova, or Ramon Llull.