Rue Saint-Jacques, Paris

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Rue Saint-Jacques
Paris 75005 Rue Saint-Jacques La Sorbonne facade 01c.jpg
Rue Saint-Jacques and the Sorbonne
Length 1,550 m (5,090 ft)
Width 16 to 20 m (52 to 66 ft)
Arrondissement 5th
Quarter Sorbonne, Val de Grâce
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
From 79 Rue Galande
To 84 Boulevard de Port-Royal
Construction
Denomination 1806

Rue Saint-Jacques is a street in the Latin Quarter of Paris which lies along the cardo of Roman Lutetia. Boulevard Saint-Michel, driven through this old quarter of Paris by Baron Haussmann, relegated the roughly parallel Rue Saint-Jacques to a backstreet, but it was a main axial road of medieval Paris, as the buildings that still front it attest. It was the starting point for pilgrims leaving Paris to make their way along the Chemin de Saint-Jacques that led eventually to Santiago de Compostela.[1]

The Paris base of the Dominican Order was established in 1218 under the leadership of Pierre Seilhan (or Seila) in the Chapelle Saint-Jacques, close to the Porte Saint-Jacques, on this street; this is why the Dominicans were called Jacobins in Paris. Thus the street's name is indirectly responsible for the Jacobin Club in the French Revolution getting that name (being based in a former Jacobin monastery, itself located elsewhere). Johann Heynlin and Guillaume Fichet established the first printing press in France, briefly at the Sorbonne and then on this street, in the 1470s. The second printers in Paris were Peter Kayser and Johann Stohl at the sign of the Soleil d'Or in Rue Saint-Jacques, from 1473.[2] The proximity of the Sorbonne led many later booksellers and printers to set up shop here also.

Notable sites

See also

Notes

  1. Mullins, Edwin (2001) The Pilgrimage to Santiago, p. 3
  2. Okey, Thomas (1906) The Story of Paris. London: Dent; pp. 148–50
  3. Institut océanographique
  4. Michelin. Paris (English ed. 1976); p. 123
  5. Huisman, G. & Poisson, G. (1966) Les Monuments de Paris. Paris: Hachette; p. 210