Former 2nd arrondissement of Paris – Wikipedia

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A wikipedia article, free l’encyclopéi.

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We designate by ancient 2 It is district of Paris The second of the twelve arrondissements of Paris created in 1795 [ first ] and having existed until 1860, the year of the expansion of Paris and the reorganization in twenty arrondissements, by the law of [ 2 ] .

The 2 It is arrondissement, of an area of 230 ha [ 3 ] , was delimited by the city walls to the north, the 3 It is district to the east, the Seine to the south and the first is District to the west:

Plan of the twelve arrondissements of Paris between 1795 and 1849 with the forty-eight districts.

The 2 It is Arrondissement, initially called “second municipality”, comes from the grouping of four of the 48 sections created in 1790: Lepeletier, Mont-Blanc, Faubourg-Montmartre and Mountain (or Butte des Moulins).

From 1811 to 1849

From 1811 to 1849, the 2 It is arrondissement was divided into four districts:

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  1. The Chaussée-d’Antin district [ note 1 ] ;
  2. The Faubourg-Montmartre district [ note 2 ] ;
  3. The Feydeau district [ note 3 ] ;
  4. The Palais-Royal district [ note 4 ] .
From 1850 to 1860

From 1850 to 1860, the 2 It is arrondissement is divided into five districts:

  1. The Palais-Royal district;
  2. The Italian district;
  3. The Opera district;
  4. The Saint-Georges district;
  5. The Montholon district.

The town hall is located at 3 rue d’Antin from 1795 to 1833, in the old hotel in Mondragon [ 4 ] , confiscated in the Revolution, where the marriages of Napoleon Bonaparte and Joséphine de Beauharnais le was celebrated [ 5 ] , and that of George Sand’s parents in 1804.

After 1833, the town hall of 2 It is Arrondissement is located at 6 rue Pinon, which became rue Rossini.

In 1849, the arrondissement town hall settled at 6 rue Drouot, in the hotel of Augny, which has just been bought by the city of Paris. In 1860, the building became the town hall of 9 It is arrondissement, which he is still today.

Mayors of 2 It is arrondissement [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

In 1860, the second ancient arrondissement disappeared as part of the Paris enlargement and its division into twenty new districts, in application of the law of [ 2 ] . The districts of the Opera (ex Chaussée-d’Antin) and Montholon (ex Faubourg-Montmartre) are integrated into the new 9 It is arrondissement, that of the Palais-Royal at 1 is and that of the Italians (ex Feydeau) at 2 It is .

Notes [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  1. section of the barn basin “From 1790 to 1792, then” Mirabeau section “From August to December 1792, then” Mont-Blanc section ».
  2. Faubourg-Montmartre section Before 1811.
  3. Library section “From 1790 to September 1792, then” Eighty-Douze section “Then, in October 1793,” section Lepeletier ».
  4. Section of the Palais-Royal “From 1790 to 1792, then” Cut-des-Moulins section “In August 1792, then” Mountain section In July 1794.
  5. Appointment by a collective decree of 18 ventôse year VIII (March 9, 1800) [ 8 ] .
  6. Previously mayor of 9 It is arrondissement.
  7. (1782-1854) banker, he was also a deputy for Paris [ ten ] .
  8. Former notary, from 1810 to 1828.
  9. (1790-1859), also deputy for Puy-de-Dôme from 1837 to 1848. He was appointed in October 1830.
  10. (1797-1843)
  11. (1785-1871)
  12. (1802-1847)
  13. Named for the second time.
  14. Former lawyer. Died in 1853
  15. Former exchange agent.

References [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  1. Consult the text of the law on archive.org .
  2. a et b n O 7072 – Law on the extension of Paris limits , Law Bulletin of the French Republic , t. XIV, XI It is series, n O 738, p. 747–751, reproduced on Google Books.
  3. a et b Administrative and historical dictionary of the streets of Paris and its monuments , Paris, Maisonneuve and Laroze, , II  ed. , 796 p. (ISBN  2-7068-1668-6 ) , p. 103–104
  4. Mondragon Hotel .
  5. Jacques Hillairet , Knowledge of old Paris , , 944 p. (ISBN  978-2-86930-648-6 )
  6. Almanach national.
  7. Proceedings of the town of Paris during the Revolution , p. 119 .
  8. a et b Nicolas Viton de Saint-Allais , Legislative, ministerial, judicial and administrative France, under the four dynasties , t. I, Paris, P. Didot the elder, ( read online ) , p. 319 .
  9. Ordinance of March 27, 1816 of the King Louis XVIII On the appointment of mayors and assistants of the twelve arrondissements of Paris until 1821.
  10. Biographical notice on the site of the National Assembly
  11. Ordinance of Louis-Philippe, king of the French, of September 15, 1830, in Journal of political and literary debates , September 20, 1830.
  12. Ordinance of the king of January 24, 1838, in Journal of political and literary debates , January 26, 1838.
  13. Ordinance of the king of December 23, 1843, in Journal of political and literary debates , December 25, 1843.
  14. Royal ordinance of December 22, 1846 appointing mayors and assistants of the twelve arrondissements of Paris .

Sources [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

  • Parcellaces of the Paris Archives (1810-1836)
  • Almanach national
  • Plan of the city of Paris, by Xavier Girard (1843)

Related articles [ modifier | Modifier and code ]

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