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Rue du Bac, Paris

"Plaque James McNeill Whistler, 110 rue du Bac, Paris 7"
The Miraculous Medal. St. Catherine Labouré is interred at 140 rue de Bac, one of the places where the Virgin Mary appeared to her 48°51′04″N 2°19′26″E / 48.850974°N 2.323770°E / 48.850974; 2.323770.

Rue du Bac is a street in Paris situated in the 7th arrondissement. The street, which is 1150 m long, begins at the junction of the quais Voltaire and Anatole-France and ends at the rue de Sèvres.

Rue du Bac is also the name of a station on line 12 of the Paris Métro, although its entrance is actually located on the boulevard Raspail at the point where it is joined by the rue du Bac.

History

Rue du Bac owes its name to a ferry (bac) established around 1550 on what is now the quai Voltaire, to transport stone blocks for the construction of the Palais des Tuileries. It crossed the Seine at the site of today's Pont Royal, a bridge constructed during the reign of Louis XIV to replace the Pont Rouge built in 1632 by the financier Barbier.

Originally, the street was named Grand Chemin du Bac, then Ruelle du Bac and Grande Rue du Bac.

Buildings of note

Odd street numbers

Even street numbers

Destroyed buildings

See also

References

  1. ^ "Memorial de la Deportation des Juifs de France One-Step Search Results". stevemorse.org. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  2. ^ Ronald Anderson and Anne Koval, James McNeill Whistler: Beyond the Myth, Carroll & Graf, New York, 1994, pg. 357 et seq.
  3. ^ "Mr. Klein (1976)". IMDb.

This article was drawn mainly from the French Wikipedia article.

Bibliography

External links