Boulevard Marguerite-de-Rochechouart

The Boulevard Marguerite-de-Rochechouart is a street in Paris, France situated at the foot of Montmartre and to its south. Like the neighbouring street, it is named after Marguerite de Rochechouart de Montpipeau (1665–1727), abbess of Montmartre. It is a result of the 1864 merging of the boulevards and chemins de ronde which followed the interior and exterior of the Wall of the Farmers-General. It has also been known as the boulevard des Poissonniers, chemin de ronde de Poissonnière and chemin de ronde de Rochechouart. It is served by the Paris Metro stations Pigalle, Anvers and Barbès – Rochechouart.

The boulevard in 1883
The boulevard in 2011

Sites

  • At n°15, former site of the théâtre de la Gaîté-Rochechouart.
  • At n°29, a pied-à-terre of the painter Gustave Caillebotte.
  • At n°38, a atelier of the painter Fernand Piet.
  • n°45, site of the old Montmartre abattoir, then the collège Rollin (1876) and today the lycée Jacques-Decour.
  • n°55, former hôtel of the painter Ernest Hébert. The revenues from it now fund the Musée Hébert de la Tronche and the Musée national Ernest Hébert de Paris[1]
  • At n°57 lived the famous polemicist Henri Rochefort – this house was also the last Paris studio of Renoir.
  • At N°57 bis lived Eugénie Buffet, famous street singer.
  • N°63, former cirque Fernando, then Médrano.
  • At N°66 the composer Gustave Charpentier lived for 60 years.
  • n°72, former site of the Elysée Montmartre, popular ballroom originally dating back to 1807.
  • N°80, site of the théâtre de l'Elysée-Montmartre, now the le Trianon.
  • n°84, site of the famous cabaret Le Chat noir created by the painter Rodolphe Salis.
  • n°120, address of the concert hall Boule Noire and the adjoining cabaret La Cigale.

Sources and references

  1. Ernest Hébert, Entre romantisme et symbolisme, 1817–1908, under the direction of Laurence Hualt-Nesme, edited by the musée Hébert La Tronche-Isère, ISBN 2-905375-53-1
  • Jacques Hillairet, Dictionnaire historique des rues de Paris, Minuit, Paris, 1963 (ISBN 2-7073-1054-9)

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