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The Olympic flame for the 2024 Paris Games will be carried for 68 days before the cauldron is lit

The Vieux Port is pictured in Marseille, southern France, Friday, June 23, 2023, where the Olympic flame will arrive on May 8, 2024 aboard the Belem sailing vessel. Paris 2024 organizing committee president Tony Estanguet unveiled flame's route for the 2024 Paris Games on Friday. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) The Vieux Port is pictured in Marseille, southern France, Friday, June 23, 2023, where the Olympic flame will arrive on May 8, 2024 aboard the Belem sailing vessel. Paris 2024 organizing committee president Tony Estanguet unveiled flame's route for the 2024 Paris Games on Friday. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole)
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The Olympic flame for the 2024 Paris Games will pass through 64 departments -- including five overseas -- and 400 towns over 68 days before the cauldron is lit.

Organizers announced the route for the torch relay on Friday at a Paris university.

"Paris 2024 is the greatest collective project in our history," organizing committee president Tony Estanguet said. "The torch relay plays an important role because it has the capacity to touch so many people."

The torch will be lit by the sun's rays on April 16 in Ancient Olympia, Greece. It will then be carried around the nation before its handover in Athens.

The flame will leave Athens on April 27 aboard a three-mast ship named Belem for the French port of Marseille -- a former Greek colony founded 2,600 years ago.

The Belem was first used in 1896, the same year the modern Olympics came back. It will be skippered by French navigator Armel Le Cleac'h, winner of the solo around-the-world race Vendee Globe in 2017. The crew will reach Marseille on May 8.

After leaving Marseille, the torch relay will take in heritage sites such the imposing Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy and the 2,500-year-old medieval city of Carcassone. It will also trail along the famed red-wine vineyards of Saint-Emilion and white-wine vines of Chablis.

"They are the Games of the country," said Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, citing French author Victor Hugo and his theme of universality. "Paris belongs to the whole country."

Including beyond its borders.

A passage in France's overseas territories, called the Relais des Oceans (Ocean Relay), will begin on June 9 in Guyana and will take in the Reunion Island, Polynesia, Gaudeloupe and Martinique before coming back to Nice on June 18.

"It's going to be spectacular," said Estanguet, a three-time Olympic canoeing champion.

Continuing over land, the torch will rise up the Alpine mountain pass of Chamonix for Olympic Day on June 23 before spending July 14 -- known as Bastille Day, France's national day -- and July 15 in Paris.

The torch will then tour various suburbs of Paris until returning via Seine-Saint-Denis -- home to the Stade de France -- before arriving back in Paris.

"It's an occasion to all come together, whatever our origins," Hidalgo said.

More precise details of the route in Paris will be given on July 5.

The location of where the cauldron will be lit and at what time are being kept secret until the day itself, amid wide expectations it will be at the iconic Eiffel Tower.

A total of 10,000 people will participate in the torch relay. The four captains of the relay will be Olympic swimming champions Laure Manaudou and Florent Manaudou -- who are siblings -- along with Paralympians Mona Francis (triathlon) and Dimitri Pavade (long jump).

SECURITY

Local police forces responsible for each section of the relay will help with security. Law enforcement will escort and protect the flame with a security bubble around the torch and its carrier.

A team of eight called "Les Gardiens de la Flamme" (The Guardians of the Flame) have been hand-picked to ensure the flame stays constantly lit. They were selected from police and military forces following an internal competition.

The Paris Games will run from July 26-Aug. 11, followed by the Paralympics from Aug. 28-Sept. 8. The flame for the Paralympics will be lit in the British town of Stoke Mandeville and will be carried by 1,000 people.

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