Rue de Provence

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Rue de Provence
230px
Length 1,193 m (3,914 ft)
Width 18 m (59 ft)
Arrondissement 8th, 9th
Quarter Chaussée d'Antin. Madeleine
From Rue du Faubourg-Montmartre
To Rue de Rome
Construction
Completion 1771
Located near the Métro stationsLe PeletierHavre - Caumartin and Trinité - d'Estienne d'Orves.
n° 34: former hotel of Thélusson
and its arch-shaped entrance (1778)

The rue de Provence is mainly in the 9th arrondissement of Paris. Only the short part of the street between rue du Havre and rue de Rome is in the 8th arrondissement.

At this place was a little river called "ruisseau de Menilmontant" (Menilmontant brook). With the Parisian population increasing, this little river became the Grand Egout (great sewer) with a two-metre width in the 17th century. Letters patent of 15 December 1770 allowed the banker Jean-Joseph de Laborde to create a 30-foot wide street by covering the "Grand Egout".

"Provence" is the name of a region in the south-east of France, but the name of the street is in honour of Louis-Stanislas-Xavier, comte de Provence, king of France from 1814 to 1824 under the name of Louis XVIII.

File:One-two-two, 122 rue de Provence, Paris 2009.jpg
The building of the former "One-two-two"

Notable places

  • n° 22 (corner of rue Chauchat): 18th-century mansion transformed by Samuel Bing into an Art Nouveau exposition building in 1895. Sold in 1904 to the ebenist Majorelle as an exposition room. Now a post office keeping the exterior decoration.
  • n° 32: Rare example of a building built in the late 1790s.[1]
  • n° 34: The door should be the only one remaining from the hôtel Thellusson built in 1778 by Claude-Nicolas Ledoux for the widow of the Swiss banker Georges-Tobie de Thellusson.[1] The opening of the hotel on the rue de Provence was a huge triumphal arch. The hotel was destroyed in 1826 when the rue Laffitte was lengthened.
  • n° 122: location of one of the most famous former lupanars, the One-two-two.
  • n° 126: Building built in 1911 by Henri Sauvage and Charles Sarrazin for the French decorator Louis Majorelle.[1]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Pérouse de Montclos (dir.), Op. cit., p. 405

References

  • (French) Félix Lazare, Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments, Paris, Imprimerie de Vinchon, 1844–1849
  • (French) Histoire de Paris rue par rue, maison par maison, Charles Lefeuve, 1875 (http://www.paris-pittoresque.com/rues/234.htm)
  • (French) Jean-Marie Pérouse de Montclos (dir.), Le Guide du Patrimoine. Paris, Paris, Hachette, 1994
  • (French) Félix de Rochegude, Promenades dans toutes les rues de Paris. VIIIe arrondissement, Paris, Hachette, 1910
  • (French) Rue de Provence on the web site wikiparis