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The Boulevard Richard-Lenoir, running from the Bastille to the Avenue de la République, is one of the wide tree-lined boulevards driven through Paris by Baron Haussmann during the Second French Empire of Napoleon III.
Arrondissement | 11th |
---|---|
Quarter | Bastille |
Coordinates | 48°51′36″N 2°22′19″E / 48.8599°N 2.3719°E |
From | Bastille |
To | Avenue de la République |
The boulevard is named after François Richard-Lenoir (1765-1839) and Joseph Lenoir-Dufresne (1768-1806), business-partner industrialists who brought the cotton industry to Paris and northern France in the 18th and early 19th centuries. It is the site of a weekly art market and of a bi-weekly fruit and vegetable market that is one of the largest in Paris.
Fictional
editGeorges Simenon's famous detective Jules Maigret is portrayed as living at 132 Boulevard Richard-Lenoir.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Georges Simenon (1948) Maigret et son mort, Presses de la Cité.