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Rue Lepic is an ancient road in the commune of Montmartre, in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, climbing the hill of Montmartre from the boulevard de Clichy to the place Jean-Baptiste-Clément It is an ancient road resulting of rectification and re-arrangement of several dirt-roads leading to the Blanche barrier (Place Blanche), starting life as ''Chemin-neuf'' (Le ''chemin-vieux'' was rue de Ravignan). In 1852 it was renamed rue de lEmpereur'', and renamed again in 1864, after the General Louis Lepic (1765-1827). * == Notable addresses == * At n°15, brasserie Café des 2 Moulins where the film ''Amélie'' was set. * At n°25, in 1910, the cabaret ''La Vache Enragée'' was based here. * At n°50, poet Jehan Rictus lived at this address for over a decade. * At n°53, resided Jean-Baptiste Clément (singer and prominent in Paris Commune) from 1880 to 1891. He then moved to n°112. * At n°54, lived Van Gogh and his brother Théo, on the third floor, from 1886 to 1888; Art dealer Alphonse Portier, lived on the first floor for several years - Armand Guillaumin had consigned some of his paintings to him in 1887. * At n°56, the Vandoren clarinet and saxophone reed manufacturer. Their premium reed brand is named after this address. * At n°59, lived the painter Charles Léandre in 1910; former site of ''Moulin de la Fontaine-Saint-Denis''. * At n°64, once lived satirical cartoonist Forain in 1875. * At n°65, adjacent to avenue Junot, is site of the ''Moulin-Neuf'' (1741). * At n°72, former workshop of Félix Ziem. * At n°73, site of the ''Moulin-Vieux'', which was demolished in 1860. * At n°77, ''Moulin de la Galette'' and ''Moulin le Radet''. * At n°85 to 87, ''Moulin de la Petite-Tour'' construction dating from 1647. * At n°87, once lived Willette. * At n°89 to 93, ''Moulin de la Vieille-Tour'', built in 1623. * At n°95 to 99, site of the ''Moulin-du-Palais'', built in 1640. * At n°98, Louis-Ferdinand Céline resided. * At n°100, Austrian doctor David Gruby built an observatory on the roof of the building in 1860. * Au n°102, rough site of ''Moulin de la Grande-Tour'', a tower constructed in stone which was taken down before the French Revolution. * At n°112, resided Jean-Baptiste Clément in 1891. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rue Lepic」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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