Rue Vaneau
Coordinates: 48 ° 51 ' N , 2 ° 19' E
Rue Vaneau | |
---|---|
location | |
Arrondissement | 7th |
quarter | Invalides |
Beginning | 59 bis, rue de Varenne |
The End | 46, rue de Sèvres |
morphology | |
length | 732 m |
width | 15 m |
history | |
Coding |
Rue Vaneau is a 750 m long street on the Rive Gauche , the left bank of the Seine in Paris .
location
The street is in the Invalides district of the 7th arrondissement . It flows north into Rue de Bellechasse and south into Rue de Sèvres .
Name origin
It bears the name of Louis Vaneau , a polytechnician (PhD X1829) who died in front of the people on July 29, 1830 during the July Revolution while taking the Babylone barracks occupied by the Swiss Guard .
history
This street was formed from three streets initially under the name «Rue de Vanneau» (with two "n") by a ministerial resolution of January 8, 1850 and then by decree of November 10, 1873 in "Rue Vaneau" (with an "n “) Renamed.
- The first part is between the Rue de Varenne and the Rue de Babylone :
- In 1826, M. Roupevin, an architect who owned the Montebello and Chimay houses , designed the project to open a 12 meter wide street on their property.
A royal decree dated June 19, 1826 reads:
«Article 1. - Le sieur Rougevin est autorisé à ouvrir, sur les terrains qui lui appartiennent entre les rues de Varenne et de Babylone, à Paris, une nouvelle rue de 12 mètres de largeur…»
"Article 1: Sieur Rougevin is entitled to open a new street 12 meters wide on the property belonging to him between rue de Varenne and rue de Babylone in Paris ..."
This breakthrough was carried out immediately and was named «Rue Mademoiselle» because of its proximity to the manor house of Adélaïde d'Orléans . This property at 55, Rue de Varenne originally belonged to Charles Auguste de Goyon de Matignon and the Prince of Monaco . By ministerial decision of October 6, 1830, this public thoroughfare was renamed Rue Vanneau (with two "n").
- The second part is between Rue de Babylone and Rue Oudinot :
- Originally this part belonged to the Rue des Brodeurs and was also named after it. Due to a council resolution of July 1, 1780, it was renamed "Rue Pochet" in honor of Jean-Baptiste André Pochet, squire ( French Écuyer ), royal council and Échevin .
A ministerial resolution of the 15th Floréal in year V (May 4th 1797), signed by Pierre Bénézech , determined the width of 7.7 m for this public path.
In 1806 the route was merged again with the Rue des Brodeurs.
In accordance with the ministerial resolution of September 14, 1829, the public route was renamed “Petite – Rue – Mademoiselle” because it extended the Rue Mademoiselle.
Due to a royal decree of December 12, 1845, the width of the path was set at 12 m.
According to the ministerial resolution of January 8, 1850, the street is merged with Rue Vanneau (with two "n").
- Originally this part belonged to the Rue des Brodeurs and was also named after it. Due to a council resolution of July 1, 1780, it was renamed "Rue Pochet" in honor of Jean-Baptiste André Pochet, squire ( French Écuyer ), royal council and Échevin .
- Third part, between rue Oudinot and rue de Sèvres :
- A document from the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés from 1642 speaks of the "Rue de Brodeval-derrière-les-Incurables".
In 1644 it was listed under the name "Rue du Lude".
Some time later it was named «Rue des Brodeurs». It then extended to the Rue de Babylone .
Around 1783 the path between Rue Plumet and Rue de Babylone was named Rue Pochet.
A ministerial resolution of the 15th Floréal in year V (May 4th 1797), signed by Pierre Bénézech , determined the width of 8 m for the rue des Brodeurs.
In 1806 the part called Rue Pochet was merged again with Rue de Brodeurs and took its name again.
In 1829 this part was called “Petite-Rue-Mademoiselle”.
The Royal Decree of December 12, 1845 fixed the width of the Rue des Brodeurs at 12 meters.
Due to the already mentioned ministerial decision of January 8, 1850, the street was merged with Rue Vanneau (with two "n").
- A document from the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés from 1642 speaks of the "Rue de Brodeval-derrière-les-Incurables".
Notable buildings
- No. 1bis: A plaque reminds us that André Gide lived here from 1926 to 1951. Albert Camus
lived here in 1944 . - No. 9: Julien Green lived here for more than 25 years until his death in 1998.
- No. 14 (formerly 8): The neo-renaissance style building was built in 1835 for the contractor Louis Genaille by the architect Pierre-Charles Dusillion . The sculptures are by Johann Dominik Mahlknecht .
- No. 23 (and 38): Karl Marx's apartment from 1843 to 1845.
- No. 54: Robert Casadesus lived here from 1924 to 1972.
Board at no. 1bis for André Gide
Façade of No. 14 (medallion by Philibert Delorme on the 1st floor)
Plaque at number 54 in memory of Robert Casadesus .
Personalities
The philosopher Karl Marx lived from 1843 to 1848 in houses 23 and 38 on Rue Vaneau.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Jacques Hillairet , Dictionnaire historique des rues de Paris , Éditions de Minuit , p. 595
- ^ Louis et Félix Lazare, Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments
- ↑ Albert Camus in the Rue Vaneau
- ↑ /www.lexpress.fr on house 9, rue Vaneau
- ↑ www.lefigaro.fr : Julien Green: joie et effroi d'être au monde
- ↑ Joseph Specklin, Pierre-Charles Dusillion et l'architecture néorenaissance , Livraisons d'histoire de l'architecture , No. 23, 2012, pp. 91–96 ( https://journals.openedition.org )
- ^ "A panel for Karl Marx"
- ^ Mairie de Paris: Budget Participatif - Paris. Retrieved October 7, 2018 (French).