Rue de la Huchette

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5e Arrt
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Rue de la HUCHETTE
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Arrondissement Ve
Quarter Sorbonne
Begins rue du Petit Pont and 6 place du Petit Pont
Ends place Saint-Michel
Length 164 m
Width 10 m
Creation c. 1200
Denomination c. 1284
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Rue de la Huchette, early morning
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The rue de la Huchette is one of Paris' oldest Rive Gauche streets. Running eastward just below the Seine river from the Place Saint-Michel, it is today an animated Latin Quarter artery with one of the highest concentrations of restaurants in the city — Greek specialties predominating. It is situated between Boulevard Saint-Michel and Rue Saint-Jacques and faces the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris. This almost exclusively pedestrian street is very popular with tourists. Disdained by some guidebooks as "Bacteria Alley", the street nevertheless has an intense night life with no less than four pubs and many bars.

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[edit] History

The rue de la Huchette existed as early as 1200 as the rue de Laas, a road running adjacent to a walled vineyard property known then as the clos du Laas. The property was sold and divided for urban development in the early 13th century, grew many noble properties in the centuries following, but from the 17th century the rue de la Huchette was known mostly for its taverns and rotisseries ("meat-cookers").

The inhabitants of la rue de la Huchette in the period leading up to the Second World War are portrayed in Elliot Paul's book The Last Time I Saw Paris (1942). The period after the Second World War is covered in Paul's book Springtime in Paris (1950).

[edit] Origin of the name

From around 1284 the name of a house on the street belonging to the Notre-Dame chapter — À la Huchette d'Or — took the place of the former rue de Laas appellation. The obscure word "huchette" may derive from "hutchet", an old term for a bugle.

[edit] Buildings of note

[edit] Odd numbers

  • 5 - Le Caveau de la Huchette, a sixteenth-century building, formerly a hotel (where Elliot Paul lived in the 20s and 30s); since 1946, one of Paris's most famous jazz clubs
  • 13 - Building whose ground floor was an office where, from 1684, apothicaires, or druggists, could find a boy nurse/assistant/coursier.
  • 17 - Building's corner with the rue Xavier Privas engraved with street name and former arrondissement.
  • 21 - Building dating from the Louis XV period.

[edit] Even numbers

  • 4 - Building dating from 1729; its former sign "A la Hure d'Or" ("of the Golden Head") is still visible in its façade.
  • 10 - Former "furnished apartment" house where Napoleon Bonaparte was said to have stayed between 1794-1795.
  • 14 - Site of a shop of a 15th century needlemaker. Although the building dates from a later time, the "Y" signaling the shopowner's trade is still visible in a marble oval above the ground-floor façade. Also visible engraved into the stone at the building's corner with the Rue du Chat-qui-Pêche is the street's name and former arrondissement number.
  • 16 - Building dating from the Louis XVI period.

[edit] Other attractions

The street is known for its collection of Greek restaurants. The maitre d's of these establishments often shatter cheap plates on the street in front of their doors to attract attention and entice tourists inside.

[edit] Closest transport

Coordinates: 48°51′11″N 2°20′43″E / 48.85306°N 2.34528°E / 48.85306; 2.34528

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