The rue Royale of Paris !

A never ending job I imagine, they are all over my vault but each time harder to find, but will update this post and using older pictures of my eternal Paris, This one I even walk to from work as could get on it and cut by place de la Madeleine or place de la Concorde.  Therefore, let me tell you about the rue Royale of Paris . Hope you enjoy the post as I

The rue Royale is in the Quartier Madeleine or neighborhood of the 8éme arrondissement or district of Paris with 282 meters long, the street begins at Place de la Concorde and ends at Place de la Madeleine. It measures 22.80 meters wide between Place de la Concorde and Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré and 43 meters elsewhere. Its name comes from the fact that this route was opened to give access to Place Louis-XV, current Place de la Concorde.

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This rue Royale replaced the Saint-Honoré gate, which was at the corner of the rue Saint-Honoré , built under Louis XIII and destroyed in 1733, and the rampart which extended to the jardin des Tuileries. The rue Royale des Tuileries was built from 1758 on a uniform facade drawing given by Ange-Jacques Gabriel. This drawing was prescribed, for the part of the street located between Place de la Concorde and the crossroads with Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré and Rue Saint-Honoré. On the street, the elevations have five levels, the first floor being the noble floor. On the courtyard, the L-shaped main building offers the traditional look of a Parisian mansion. The main staircase, common to the two main buildings, is at the junction of the wing in return of the building on the courtyard and the building on the street. Two identical hotels, works of Gabriel, whose colonnaded facades overlook the square, frame its southern end, ending at Place de la Concorde. Around 1792, during the French revolution,rue Royale was renamed “rue de la Révolution”. It then became “rue Royale Saint-Honoré” then, in 1795, “rue de la Concorde”. It resumed its name by prefectural decree of April 27, 1814.   After the Restoration, the rue Royale gradually lost its residential character and became one of the high places of the Parisian luxury trade, particularly from the end of the 19C.

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Some of my favorites mansions to see while walking by are

At No 1: Hôtel de Coislin on the corner of Place de la Concorde where, on February 6, 1778, Conrad Alexandre Gérard in the name of King Louis XVI, Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane, Arthur Lee signed the treaties by which France was the first country to recognize the independence of the United States of America. Yeah!  Between Place de la Concorde and Maxim’s restaurant, on the south pilaster of the entrance to No. 1, you can see the facsimile of a poster of the French mobilization of 1914. The original poster having been forgotten long after the start of hostilities, the city of Paris decided to perpetuate this oversight, by replacing the poster that had become illegible by a new one, protected by a glass framework. At No 2: Hôtel de la Marine, also known as the Garde-Meuble hotel. Today headquarters of the staff of the French National Navy. No 3: Hôtel RichelieuMaxim’s restaurant established at this address since 1893 is remarkable for its storefront and its Art Nouveau interior decor of 1899. At No 9: hotel built after 1781. François Alexandre Frédéric de La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt died there on March 27, 1827. At No 11: hotel built after 1781. The large cut-out living room was reassembled in Paris at the Musée Nissim-de-Camondo museum and the bedroom at the Museum of Decorative Arts in Buenos Aires Argentina. Queen Nathalie of Serbia lived there, and was later call the Brunner Exhibition Hall in 1910. At No 13: hotel built after 1781. The writer Jean Baptiste Antoine Suard, perpetual secretary of the French Academy, died in this building on July 20, 1817. A living room of the apartment on the street was reassembled at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

At No 16: Boulangerie Ladurée bakery founded in 1862. In 1871, when Baron Haussmann gave Paris a new face, a fire allowed the transformation of the bakery into a pastry shop. Ernest Ladurée had the idea of mixing genres: Parisian coffee and pastry, and thus gave birth to one of the first tea salons in the capital. Ladurée remained a pastry famous for its macaroons. At No 21: the famous Brasserie Weber was installed in this building from 1899 to 1961. Before 1914, it was the meeting place for writers, journalists and artists, frequented by the designers Forain and Caran d’Ache, the writers Paul- Jean Toulet, Léon Daudet, Marcel Proust, the editorial offices of Le Temps and Le Figaro, actors like Marguerite Deval. After the riots of February 6, 1934, the wounded were transported to Weber’s home while waiting for first aid. It was from 1905 the property of the hotelier Arthur Millon then of his son-in-law René Kieffer.

A chic address with wonderful high fashion stores is the Village Royale at no 25 rue Royale , for your shopping pleasure in style. At No 24: home of humorist Alphonse Allais. And finally, at No 27 and no 3 place de la Madeleine: building which housed the  Brasserie Autrichienne or austrian brewery, badly damaged by projectiles fired during the Commune, in the second half of May 1871; the Larue restaurant, opened at the same location in 1886, hosted Proust in the early 1900s, and from 1924 the monthly meeting called “Bixio Dinner” made to host men of letters, writers and journalists, and men of influence in political, economic and cultural circles.

The official Village Royale : http://www.villageroyal.com/

The Paris tourist office on the Madeleine neighborhood/Quartier : https://parisjetaime.com/eng/article/madeleine-a901

There you go folks, a dandy historical street of my eternal Paris as in many, This one more memorable as walked many times to and from work in Paris , You have a wonderful street in a sublime area of Paris, walk it, Again, hope you enjoy this post on the rue Royale of Paris as I

And remember, happy travels, good health, and many cheers to all !!!

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