Former 2nd arrondissement of Paris – Wikipedia
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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:
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:
- The Chaussée-d’Antin district [ note 1 ] ;
- The Faubourg-Montmartre district [ note 2 ] ;
- The Feydeau district [ note 3 ] ;
- The Palais-Royal district [ note 4 ] .
- From 1850 to 1860
From 1850 to 1860, the 2 It is arrondissement is divided into five districts:
- The Palais-Royal district;
- The Italian district;
- The Opera district;
- The Saint-Georges district;
- 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 ]
- ‘ section of the barn basin “From 1790 to 1792, then” Mirabeau section “From August to December 1792, then” Mont-Blanc section ».
- ‘ Faubourg-Montmartre section Before 1811.
- ‘ Library section “From 1790 to September 1792, then” Eighty-Douze section “Then, in October 1793,” section Lepeletier ».
- ‘ Section of the Palais-Royal “From 1790 to 1792, then” Cut-des-Moulins section “In August 1792, then” Mountain section In July 1794.
- Appointment by a collective decree of 18 ventôse year VIII (March 9, 1800) [ 8 ] .
- Previously mayor of 9 It is arrondissement.
- (1782-1854) banker, he was also a deputy for Paris [ ten ] .
- Former notary, from 1810 to 1828.
- (1790-1859), also deputy for Puy-de-Dôme from 1837 to 1848. He was appointed in October 1830.
- (1797-1843)
- (1785-1871)
- (1802-1847)
- Named for the second time.
- Former lawyer. Died in 1853
- Former exchange agent.
References [ modifier | Modifier and code ]
- Consult the text of the law on archive.org .
- 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.
- 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
- Mondragon Hotel .
- Jacques Hillairet , Knowledge of old Paris , , 944 p. (ISBN 978-2-86930-648-6 )
- Almanach national.
- Proceedings of the town of Paris during the Revolution , p. 119 .
- 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 .
- 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.
- Biographical notice on the site of the National Assembly
- Ordinance of Louis-Philippe, king of the French, of September 15, 1830, in Journal of political and literary debates , September 20, 1830.
- Ordinance of the king of January 24, 1838, in Journal of political and literary debates , January 26, 1838.
- Ordinance of the king of December 23, 1843, in Journal of political and literary debates , December 25, 1843.
- 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)
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