Rue Royale, Paris
Appearance
Length | 282 m (925 ft) |
---|---|
Width | 22.8 m (75 ft) between place de la Concorde and rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré; 43 m elsewhere |
Arrondissement | 8th |
Quarter | Madeleine. |
From | 2 place de la Concorde |
To | 2 place de la Madeleine |
Construction | |
Completion | April 22, 1732 |
Denomination | March 11, 1768 |
The rue Royale (French pronunciation: [ʁy ʁwajal]) is a short street in Paris, France running between the place de la Concorde and the place de la Madeleine (site of the Church of the Madeleine). Among the well-known addresses on this street is that of Maxim's restaurant, at number 3.
On 12 August 1843, the Rue Royale was the scene for a bizarre phenomenon, when tens of thousands of butterflies landed, causing chaos and swarming the shops and restaurants. The pillars of the Madeleine were, reportedly, "covered".[1]
The rue Royale is in the city's 8th arrondissement.
There is also a Rue Royale in Brussels, Belgium, near the Royal Palace.
48°52′5″N 2°19′23″E / 48.86806°N 2.32306°E
References
- ^ https://books.google.com/books?id=ObNLAAAAcAAJ&lpg=PP8&ots=-h_liLSbMF&dq=%22vast%20cloud%20of%20butterflies%22%20paris&pg=PA114#v=onepage&q=butterflies&f=false The Illustrated London News, 19 August 1843.