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(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4The Clos Bruneau is a former toponym delimiting a Parisian district located in the 5 It is arrondissement disappeared in 1855. There were two different clos of this name: one, a place occupied since by the Luxembourg Palace; The other, near Judas Street: pseudonym of that of Clos-Bruneau, whose name was also worn by rue Jean-de-Beauvais very frequented by students. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4In the Middle Ages, the Clos Bruneau, also called “Clos Brunel” was, as the name of Clos indicates, a Parisian vineyard located in the current district of the Sorbonne, on a plot of cultivated land dependent on the Sainte Abbey -Genevi\u00e8ve and chapter Saint-Marcel. It was delimited by: He understood: At XVI It is A century, this district became the exclusive district of booksellers and printers, overflowing a little on rue Saint-Jacques. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4 Table of ContentsVineyard [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Les Hospitaliers: the church and the Saint-Jean-de-Latran hospital [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Lordship of Saint-Marcel: Life of the inhabitants [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Faculty of Law [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Schools and universities in law [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Colleges [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Book professions: booksellers and printers [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Features [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Bibliography [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Related articles [ modifier | Modifier and code ] External link [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Vineyard [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The Clos Bruneau vineyard belonged to the bishop of Paris. He was given in 1101 to the religious of the Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve abbey for the parish of the Saint-\u00c9tienne-du-Mont church, in exchange for the parish of Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve-des-Ardents. His name comes from an old closedy of vines which would have belonged to a certain “bruneau”, called, in all the old titles, Locked brunelli , clos Burniau, Brunel & Bruneau , Clos Burnel , through which rue Jean-de-Beauvais, called rue du Clos-Bruneau, and rue Saint-Hilaire or rue du Puits-C\u00e9tain were pierced: \u201cThe little and riding rue des Carmes, pierced around 1250, first bore the name of Clos-Bruneau, on which she had opened; But, during the advent of the Valois dynasty, it was called rue Saint-Hilaire, because it resulted in the church placed under this invocation. Les Grands Carmes, also called the Carmelites of Place Maubert, were established there in 1318. \u201d [Ref. necessary] According to others, his name comes “From its stony territory, or perre like that of these paths called the brown roads , and that, for a few centuries, we have been advised to write Brunehauld \u00bb [ n 1 ] . In 1313, the size of Paris indicated two taverns, the stone tavern the page in the Brunel enclosure; And in Dextre, (right), Renaud the other tavernier, a nattier, a savetier, and a tailor of dresses, Geoffroy the English, then the woman Thomasse, widow of the late Brissaut. Les Hospitaliers: the church and the Saint-Jean-de-Latran hospital [ modifier | Modifier and code ] At XI It is century was founded in this clos, rue de Latran, the Hospital Priory of Saint-Jean de Latran which included a tower housing pilgrims en route to Jerusalem and a parish church served by three conventual monks [ n 2 ] , [ first ] . They also had houses of which they perceived rents, such as the house in the Saint Martin image, near the horse-Rouge, rue du Clos Bruneau, or that, at XV It is century from Henri Estienne who paid rent to order, for his house called Corbeil schools , with the image of Saint John the Baptist. This house, a member of the Petit-Corbeil had been built by a commander of the order, Gilbert Ponchet, known as Gilbert de Corbeil, born in Corbeil, who was a doctor in law [ 2 ] . Lordship of Saint-Marcel: Life of the inhabitants [ modifier | Modifier and code ] The Clos Bruneau depended on the lordship of the Saint-Marcel chapter, who owned part of the clos and had the right to appoint the cure of the parish church of Saint-Hilaire in 1200 [ 3 ] . There was a “crossroads of Clos-Bruneau” there, a sort of charter, Frommentel, Lanneau and Jean de Beauvais streets near a well dried by Robert certain, parish priest of Saint-Hilaire and rector of Sainte-Barbe in 1570. At XVII It is century, in 1669, near the Certain, at n O 16 of the current rue de Lanneau, was a pastry very famous for its \u201ccalf heads\u201d, pieces and brioches: it disappeared in May 1898. Rue des Sept-Voies [ n 3 ] , which goes from the Saint-Hilaire crossroads to the Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve cloister, previously passed to the walls of the city; In 1380, she only went to the walls of the Saint-Victor Abbaye gardens. The Saint-Hilaire parish: The church extended to the rue d’Ecosse, or rue du Chaudron, had a cemetery where many booksellers and printers were buried, and a presbytery. On the left, there was a narrow and steep alley, an old main path of Clos Bruneau, which was later named Jusseline , then impasse Bouvart [ 4 ] . The houses that bordered it had their entry on the other streets. In a concordat spent in 1222 between the king, the bishop and the chapter of Notre-Dame, Philippe Auguste declared that the trafficking of bread and wine belonged to him in the Clos Bruneau of Mont Saint-Hilaire. In 1367 an order “Injoin to all girls dissolved to remain only in rue du Froidmantel, near Clos Bruneau in the Robert court” [Ref. necessary] . Faculty of Law [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Schools and universities in law [ modifier | Modifier and code ] A Canon Law School [ n 4 ] , Closed Brunello University of Paris , founded in 1384 by Gilbert and Philippe Ponce settled there at XIV It is century, hence its name Street schools with decrees . Then, in 1370, the college of Beauvais was founded there (he had Saint Fran\u00e7ois Xavier, Nicolas Boileau and many others for students), thanks to the purchase of houses Images A you Bed [ 5 ] . We met on rue du Clos Bruneau, on the right, the colleges of Presles and Dormans-Beauvais. Then the old decree schools (we read the decrees) [ 6 ] one of which was opposite on the left side. Laon college moved to rue du Clos-Bruneau then, in 1340, in the house at the Lion d’Or [ n 5 ] . Colleges [ modifier | Modifier and code ] Book professions: booksellers and printers [ modifier | Modifier and code ] THE Odes de Ronsard, printed at Clos Bruneau, at Gabriel Buon at the Saint Claude brand, in 1560. The booksellers, printers and bookbinders abounded in the Clos Bruneau district: there have been countless testamentary acts, rental contracts, wedding contracts. The houses of Clos Bruneau were rented, or transmitted by testamentary, from booksellers to booksellers, throughout the XVI It is century. They always have a brand, often that of a patron saint, sometimes a motto, and have picturesque names. Many bookstores and printers such as, Cerf horn house , rue des Sept-Voyes, or, rue d’Ecosse, At La Corne-de-Daim [ n 6 ] . Some names and printer marks: Worksheet Brumennij in Closed Brunello, Paris (Paris) 1564 in the Saint-Claude , rented by Maurice de la Porte from 1522 at the Chartreux Food in a closed Brunello a Maurice de la Porte , 1534, SA Mort at 1548, The barire company by SA IVE: Catherine L-Wheened, Muuvras de Ronsard, with Folastries , seized and burned by justice in the spring of 1553. Then it was Claude Buon who resumed the case and who signed a contract with Ronsard. Claude Micard, at Clos Bruneau to the Chair Brand (1576) Printed in the closed Brunllo, under the sign of the British, at the widow of Maurice \u00e0 door In the closed Brunello, under the famous Divine Claudius (1549) From the workshop of Gabriel Buon, to the D.Claudij sign (1564) Prigent to Calculas, to the twin Cyppas (1548) But also : At Clos Bruneau to the Gargouille brand At the widow Guillaume Le Bret Jean Br\u00e9mond, printer, Wild Livet Brand Jean Crespin, bookseller, at the corner of Coqueret college Fran\u00e7ois Estienne at The shield of France , at the crossroads of Clos Bruneau Nicolas Baith, bookseller, in the house like Saint Catherine Jean Garnier, between the Maison de la Rose-Blanche and La Hure-de-Sanglier to the Cerf horn overlooking Saint-Jacques Street Maurice de la Porte, in a house belonging to the Chartreux In the image of Saint Claude, Thomas Regnard Libraire, rue Fromentel In the Estoille brand, Jean Mac\u00e9 who buys a house like Notre-Dame, at the corner of rue Jousseline Like the olive tree, Jean lessor, resident Clos Bruneau “Near the three-crissions” or “to the beautiful flower” Antoine Mirault, rue des seven ways, to the brand of Saint-Pierre Guillaume Mondet Mestre du Cauldron, rue du Chaudron (rue d’\u00e9cosse, college of Carembert, college of Reims, former college of Thou) for a rent of 50 golden gold Toussaint Pillehoste, living in the Rose-Rouge brand Jean Tuff\u00e9, Pierre Plan\u00e9, Simon de Sommomille, bookbinder, gilding and bookseller, at the cross-white rue des Sept-Voies Jean Savetier, in Maison-Rouge, rue des Carmes Jacques Roussin, Pie-en-Cage brand, rue Saint Jacques The House of the Angel and the Maison de la Couronne, former “gold mortar” chicheface , etc. [ 7 ] . So settled in front of the University of Canon Law, a few meters from the Beauvais college, Robert Estienne, son of Henri Estienne installed in 1503 against the University of Decrees, and whose printing was directed after his death by Simon de Colines. Henri Estienne would have had Saint John the Baptist as a sign in the Corbeil house , rabbits, In the workshop cunicutorum [ 8 ] and an olive tree engraved in stone, with the motto more oil than wine appearing on his books, (Robert Estienne Don’t be a high taste [ 9 ] ). Some books by Fran\u00e7ois Estienne bear the registration, the last in particular, of 1548, of his indicated home, Franciscus Stephanus, “at Clos-Bruneau, with the Law School”, In the Closure-Brunello, under the shield of France . Rue des Sept-Voies, in 1571, it was sixteen inhabitants of the book profession “To the donation of 300,000 pounds” : Claude Mabille, Jacques Moustier, Jacques Nicole (bookstore “Au Pot-\u00e0-Moineaux”), Jean (Jacques) Coqueret, Estienne Vallet (bookseller “\u00e0 la Bible d’Or”), Roland Charpentier, Julien Maizi\u00e8res, (Maissi\u00e8res) and Hubert de Labaye, bondese, Olivier Darsy (printer “Corne-de-Cerf”), Beno\u00eet Regnault, Jean Braconnier Printer (court “d’Albret”), Nicolas Souillard (bookseller “at the college”), Henri Labb\u00e9 (Le B\u00e9 ) (Librairie “Au Griffon d’Argen”), Jean Le Bouc (bookstore “\u00e0 la diligence”), Jean February (bookseller “near the king’s college”). There is also in this street: a butcher, a Arbalestrier, a pastry chef (“with the gold bible”), a study, a locksmith. The pastry chef Beguin Berthon is the most taxed: 100 floors. Features [ modifier | Modifier and code ] A medieval fabliau, The said of the streets of Paris de Guillot de Paris mentions it: “Contrary is rue Judas Then rue du Petit-Four, This is the grandson: Saint ylaire, and then Closes of Burns … Ou l’O on to speak Maint Bruliau [ 11 ] \u00bb A cesspool: at that time the street was deemed dirty, due to the rags left by printers, and transformed because of this into a place of ease, to which Rabelais alludes to in Pantagruel [ n 7 ] . Clos Bruneau wines were renowned in the Middle Ages. Elogious mention is mentioned in a cartulary of Saint Genevi\u00e8ve in 1202 [ twelfth ] In my restores queues from Garandande. The opening of rue des \u00e9coles led to the removal of all the peers numbers of the old rue du Clos-Bruneau. At XIX It is A century, on the eve of the drilling of the rue des \u00e9coles by the Insanubre Housing Commission, the district is still as unhealthy. Paper manufacturers throw their rags into the Jean de Lateran cloister who has become a cesspool, which communicates with rue Jean-de-Beauvais by a tiny alley. The destitute are extremely numerous, taking refuge on the Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve mountain during the works of Grand Paris. Clos Bruneau is occupied by ragpickers [ 13 ] , wandering musicians, monkeys and animal showers, puppet manufacturers: sculptors, dressing and shores. Savoyards are very numerous [ n 8 ] . In 1855, a municipal decree suppressed the streets of Clo\u00eetre-Saint-Beno\u00eet, Frommentel-Saint-Hilaire, Four, Scotland and Charti\u00e8re, Clos-Bruneau, Mulberry, Bon-Puits, Versailles, Clo\u00eetre -Des-Bernardins, Place-des-Veaux, rue des Noyers, and Impasse Bouvart, but thirteen street streets, including rue Jean-de-Beauvais and rue des Carmes, will be extended [ 14 ] . \u2191 These brunette paths, brown roads, were called so because, made of brownish stones, they cut on the whiteness of the paved roads, quoted in Heinrich Ludwig Meding, Paris medical topography test . \u2191 In March 1221, brother Haimard, treasurer and perhaps commander, appeared at the court of the king, in an act relating to a procedure initiated against the bishop of Paris, about the Clos Bruneau cf.templiers.net VII-TRESORIERS OF THE TEMPLE OF PARIS \u2191 Spelled Savoy In an ancient poem, she would have had vines: the cartulary of Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve, in the year 885 we said sept-vessels: he was talked about two arpents of vineyards located in the Septemvias , and four other situas in S. Symphorianum \u2191 That is to say three to five groups of law grouped. \u2191 In May 1328 died Gui de Laon, and disputes were raised between the college and the succession of Cardinal de Bruges, whose deceased was the administrator. G\u00e9rard de Montaigu, another lawyer for the king, canon of Paris and Reims, executor of the last wishes of the treasurer of the Holy Chapelle, determines a transaction; Then he perfect the work of the founder, by providing the community of the H\u00f4tel du Lion-d’Or, which he lives in, rue Saint-Hilaire, near the college of Dace, of which everything is not sold by the Carmes at Laon scholarship holders. Montaigu also gives 300 pounds to the religious lords of Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve, to allow the transfer of schoolchildren to the H\u00f4tel du Lion-d’Or, a displacement which took place in ceremonies on October 8, 1340, with the approval of Roger d’Armagnac, bishop of Laon, in Charles Lefeuve, History of Paris Rue by rue, house by house , 1875. \u2191 Pierre de Maigny, bookseller, At La Corne-de-Daim , or Paris, at Michel Gadouleau, residing at Clos Bruneau at the sign of the Deer horn , also called to the brand of King David , or House of M gr Hip . \u2191 We also know that the university, attentive to preserving the cleanliness and sanitation of the district it lived, obtained a stop of the parliament against the butchers of the Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve mountain, which infects it by their filth. \u2191 Which suggests that there was a street in Savoy in the Middle Ages. \u2191 Physical, civil and moral history of Paris , Dulaure \u2191 Mannier [1872) p. 65 \u2191 The church disappeared under the Revolution, sold on 18 fructidor year III [first] Church of Saint-Hilaire dependent on Saint-Marcel Abb\u00e9 Lebeuf History of the city and the whole diocese of Paris , Volume 2 by LebeFet Historical and picturesque painting of Paris from the Gauls\u2026 , Volumes 2-3 match John (St. Victor) \u2191 (1380), Longue-All\u00e9e, Le Cul-de-Sac Josselin , Jousselin , or Jusseline (1539) Ruelle Saint Hilaire, now Impasse Bouvart , perhaps because of the Beef (Impasse of oxen) Not very distant (the butchers of the Sainte-Genevi\u00e8ve mountain put their oxen in the two places) or rue Saint-Hilaire did not yet be among the streets of Paris at XIII It is century after Alexis-Hubert Jaillot, Historical and picturesque painting of Paris: from the Gauls . Volumes 2-3 match John (of St-Victor) \u2191 Epitaphor for old Paris Charter . \u2191 Source\u00a0: Bulletin , Volume 3 by France. Committee of the language, history and arts of France . \u2191 Philippe Renouard, Documents on printers, booksellers, carties, engravers, founders of letters, bookbinders, books of books, faisers of clasps, illuminators, parchments and stationers who exercised in Paris from 1450 to 1600. Collected in the national archives and in the department of manuscripts of the National Library , 1901. \u2191 This indication is found in reprint that the partners made, in 1502, of the same work of Lef\u00e8vre d’Etaples Grand Universal Dictionary of XIX It is century: French, historical, geographic \u2191 Andr\u00e9 Saglio, Jacques Dr\u00e9sa, Houses of famous men . \u2191 P. L. Jacob, \u00c9douard Fournier, Ferdinand S\u00e9r\u00e9, History of printing and arts and professions . \u2191 Hereby begins the “said of the streets of Paris” , in Fabliaux and tales of poets Fran\u00e7ois des XI It is century, XII It is century, XIII It is century, XIV It is century and XV It is century , by Dominique Martin M\u00e9on, page 244: The vines that there have been an opportunity to burn well from the branch and the stages. In fact, Maubert is very close. \u2191 Folio 59 – The vineyon Brunella \u2191 Louis-Adolphe Turpin, The ragpickers of Paris . \u2191 Collection of patent letters, royal ordinances, decrees and decrees . Bibliography [ modifier | Modifier and code ] A. Privat d’Anglemont, “Le Clo\u00eetre Saint-Jean de Lateran”, “Le camp des Barbares de Paris” and “Rue Traversine” and “rue du Clos-Bruneau”, in Unknown Paris , 1886 ( on line ). Father Lebeuf, Hippolyte Cocheris, History of the city and the whole diocese of Paris ( on line ). C\u00e9cile Fabris, Study and live in Paris in the Middle Ages , Paris, School of Charters, 2005 ( online extract ). Eugene mannier, The commandery of the Grand Priory of France according to the unpublished documents kept in the National Archives in Paris , Paris, 1872 ( read online ) Related articles [ modifier | Modifier and code ] External link [ modifier | Modifier and code ] (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/all2en\/wiki32\/clos-bruneau-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Clos Bruneau – Wikipedia"}}]}]