Rue de la Bûcherie explained

Rue de la Bûcherie
Map Type:France Paris
Map Size:265
Coordinates:48.8531°N 2.3453°W
Arrondissement:5th
Quarter:Sorbonne
Terminus A:Rue Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre
Terminus B:Rue du Petit-Pont
Length:160m (530feet)
Width:8m (26feet)
Completion Date:17th century
Inauguration Label:Denomination

Rue de la Bûcherie is a street in the 5th arrondissement of Paris, France.

History

Near the cathedral Notre-Dame de Paris and the Place Maubert, between La Seine and Boulevard Saint-Germain Rue de la Bûcherie is one of the oldest Rive Gauche streets. In the Middle Ages damaged meats were salted and boiled here to feed the poorest.[1]

In the 17th century, La Voisin, a chief personage in the famous affaire des poisons, which disgraced the reign of Louis XIV, lived here.

Nicolas-Edme Rétif, the French novelist, lived on Rue de la Bûcherie during the years leading to his death in 1806.[2]

Until the late 1970s the place was a popular Parisian street with mixed modest restaurants (Lebanese, Asian, Pakistani), antiques dealers, and art galleries.In the 1970s the Annick Gendron contemporary art gallery was established at no. 1.

The dissection amphitheatre of the ancient Faculty of Medicine where Jacques-Bénigne Winslow taught is still located on Rue de la Bûcherie.

Origin of the name

The name come from the ancient "Port aux bûches", a port where logs were put down.[3]

Buildings of note

Closest transport

Notes and references

  1. Plaisir de France
  2. Alain Dautriat, Sur les murs de Paris : guide des plaques commémoratives p, 47, L'Inventaire, 1999
  3. Théophile-Sébastien Lavallée, Histoire des Français depuis le temps des Gaulois jusqu'en 1830, II, project Gutenberg

External links