Rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs | |
Map Type: | France Paris 1st arrondissement#France Paris |
Type: | Street |
Length M: | 373 |
Width: | between 12 and 20 m |
Arrondissement: | 1st |
Quarter: | Halles Palais-Royal |
Coordinates: | 48.8625°N 2.3393°W |
Terminus A: | 170-182, rue Saint-Honoré |
Terminus B: | 1 bis, place des Victoires |
Construction Start Date: | before the 14th century |
The Rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs is a street in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, France.
The street was built on a land that consisted of gardens named petits champs ("small fields"). A cross (croix in French) was located next to a house in the street, near the Rue des Pélicans.[1]
A part of this public road was opened during the reign of Philip Augustus. In 1685, as a part of the re-organisation of Place des Victoires, King Louis XIV requested the houses of the road to be aligned to open a perspective onto his bronze statue. The part of the street affected by this decision was named Rue d'Aubusson after François, Vicomte d'Aubusson, who at the time was building an hôtel particulier on Place des Victoires. Later, the name Rue Croix-des-Petits-Champs was used for the entire road. On Germinal 3, Year X (March 24, 1802), a ministerial decision signed by Jean-Antoine Chaptal set the minimum width of the street at 10 m. The minimum width was extended to 12 m by a royal order dated May 2, 1837.