Rue La Boétie

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Rue La Boétie
P1040350 Paris VIII rue La Boétie rwk.JPG
Rue La Boétie
Rue La Boétie is located in Paris
Rue La Boétie
Shown within Paris
Arrondissement8th
QuarterChamps-Élysées. Faubourg du Roule.
Coordinates48°52′24″N 2°18′44″E / 48.8732°N 2.3123°E / 48.8732; 2.3123Coordinates: 48°52′24″N 2°18′44″E / 48.8732°N 2.3123°E / 48.8732; 2.3123
From
ToChamps-Élysées
Construction
Completion29 November 1777
Denomination2 March 1864

The rue La Boétie is a street in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, running from rue d'Astorg to avenue des Champs-Élysées. It is named in honour of Étienne de La Boétie (1530–1563), friend of moralist Michel de Montaigne.

History[]

From 1640, the space today found between the streets of the Colosseum and Berri, avenue des Champs-Élysées and the rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré was occupied by the Royal nursery. This provided all the trees, shrubs and flowers for the Royal residences. Decommissioned under the Régence to make way for a subdivision planned by John Law, the plan was eventually dropped.

In 1755 the land became te property of the Louis Phélypeaux, comte de Saint-Florentin, who was then Secretary of State of the Maison du Roi, who ceded it in 1764 to his mistress, the Countess of Langeac (1725–1778). She then sold it in 1772 to the Comte d'Artois, who later became Charles X of France, Louis XVI's younger brother.

Planning approval via Letters Patent was given on 29 November 1777, that allowed the Prince to break into the field from rue d'Angoulême with a width of 30 feet (9.1 m), and to name it in honor of his eldest son Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême (1775–1844). New letters patent of 4 April 1778 approved the opening of the streets of Ponthieu, Neuve-de-Berri (current rue de Berri), new-de-Poitiers (current rue d'Artois) and Angoulême-Saint-Honoré. An alignment report was drawn up by the office of the City of Paris on 24 November 1778, allowing a ministerial decision to be taken on 27 December 1803 width set the width of the street to 10 metres (33 ft).

During the French Revolution and until 1815, the street bore the name rue de l'Union (Union Street). It then resumed its original name until 1830, when it became rue de la Charte (Street of the Charter). It then underwent a quick succession of names, becoming rue Lapeyrouse, rue d'Angoulême à nouveau (1852), rue de Morny (1863), rue de la Commune (1871), rue Mac-Mahon and finally rue Pierre-Charron in 1871. The area between the place Saint-Augustin and the place Chand-Goyon was called rue de la Pépinière until 1868, and then rue Abattucci.

The street took its current name in 1879, throughout its length, in honour of Étienne de La Boétie (1530–1563), friend moralist of Michel de Montaigne.

Notable buildings[]

Number Current usage History Image
3 Offices, including a branch of HSBC bank Home of couturier Charles Frederick Worth.[1] Plaque rue La Boétie à Paris.jpg
8 Confectioner Latinville. Remembered in the memoirs of Céleste Albaret, the housekeeper of Marcel Proust, and in Nana by Émile Zola.
9 Home of Anglo-American writer Henry James.
21 Art gallery of Georges Wildenstein, and later Paul Rosenberg (1881–1959).[2]
23 Home and workshop of artist Pablo Picasso, from 1918 to 1940. Rented for him and paid for by Paul Rosenberg. 23 rue de La Boétie.JPG
26 Home of (1900–1994) from 1951 to 1993.
27 Home of the brothers Émile and Vincent Isola, directors of the Théâtre de la Gaîté-Lyrique. 27 rue La Boétie.JPG
28 Bulgarian cultural space, inaugurated on 7 October 2004. Includes a plaque commemorating Christo Botev.[3] Plaque Christo Botev au 28 rue La Boétie à Paris.JPG
33 Gallery
34 Private
41 Home of writer Eugène Sue.
42 Local office of Jones Lang LaSalle Siège Jones Lang LaSalle France-Paris.jpg
45–47 Salle Gaveau, a 1020-seat concert hall built in 1905–06 by the architect Jacques Hermant, for the piano manufacturer Gaveau Salle Gaveau 2012-09-02 15-52-23.jpg
48 National Federation of Credit Agricole
51 La Poste - main post office for the 8th district La Poste - Bureau central - Paris 8e.JPG
54–56 Corporate headquarters of Sanofi S.A.[4] Former office of Alcatel-Lucent S.A.[5] Rue de la Boétie, 54-56.jpg
55 [6] Former headquarters of the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), 2002 to 2011.[7] Ancien siège de l'UMP en rénovation.jpg
57 Wildenstein Institute Built in 1776 by architect Charles De Wailly for himself. Purchased in 1905 by Nathan Wildenstein (1852–1934), who had it revised by architect Walter-André Destailleur. Home to the Wildenstein Institute since 2011.[8] Maison De Wailly, 57 rue La Boétie, Paris 8e.jpg
58 Paris branch office of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1948 to 2003.[9]
59 Gallery Denise Valtat
66 Home of Émile Fabre (1869–1955).
88 Saint-Philippe-du-Roule Court
101 Baroche Café Brasserie[10] Cafe Brasserie Baroche in Paris.JPG
103 Home of Lucien Napoleon Bonaparte-Wyse (1844–1909), who died in this building. Later home of Eugène Lefèvre-Pontalis.
106–8 Offices[11] Former location of the Central téléphonique Elysées. Central téléphonique Élysées - Paris 8e.jpg
109 Complex of banks and shops built in 1929–31 by architect for the National City Bank of America Built in 1777–78 by architect as the Hôtel Thiroux de Montsauge for financier . Renamed the Hôtel de Massa. Moved stone-by-stone in 1928 and reassembled at No. 38, rue du Faubourg-Saint-Jacques. Hotel Thiroux de Montsauge.jpg
122 Former home of Sadi Carnot (1837–1894), who lived here from 1882 before becoming President of the French Republic in 1887. Later home to composer Alfred Bruneau (1857–1934) from 1910.

References[]

  1. ^ "Worth". Wordnet. Princeton University. Retrieved 21 May 2009.
  2. ^ "The Paul Rosenberg ArchivesA Gift of Elaine and Alexandre Rosenberg PaulRosenberg".
  3. ^ "INSTITUT CULTUREL BULGARE". www.ccbulgarie.com. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  4. ^ "Sanofi - The new Sanofi's headquarters". en.sanofi.com. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  5. ^ Alcatel-Lucent
  6. ^ http://www.pepinierelaboetie.com/cest-ou.html
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-12-02. Retrieved 2011-12-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ Labbé, Jean-Michel Décugis, Mélanie Delattre, Christophe (February 2011). "EXCLUSIF - Trente oeuvres "disparues ou volées" ont été saisies à l'institut Wildenstein". Le Point (in French). Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  9. ^ http://www.lesechos.fr/18/08/2006/LesEchos/19732-68-ECH_une-antenne-dans-les-beaux-quartiers-parisiens.htm
  10. ^ Baroche Café Brasserie
  11. ^ "La Française REM acquiert un immeuble de bureaux situé au 106-108 rue de la Boétie à Paris 8ème". La Tribune (in French). Retrieved 2016-04-05.
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