A Walk Around Square Du Temple, Paris
The Square du Temple is a garden in Paris, France in the 3rd arrondissement, established in 1857. It is one of 24 city squares planned and created by Georges-Eugène Haussmann and Jean-Charles Alphand. The Square occupies the site of a medieval fortress in Paris, built by the Knights Templar. Parts of the fortress were later used as a prison during the French Revolution, and then demolished by the mid-19th century.
By 1808, the Temple had become a place of pilgrimage for royalists, so Napoleon ordered its demolition, which took two years. Remnants were demolished around 1860 under orders from Napoleon III.
Today its location is a station of the Paris Metro, serving the carreau du temple (covered market) and the Palais de Justice (Courthouse) of the third arrondissement.
In 2007, the square was awarded the ecological green spaces awarded by ECOCERT, the international organic certification.
There are two statues. One represents the songwriter Pierre-Jean de Béranger, who lived on the nearby street, which later took his name. This is the second in his image. A first bronze statue, due to Amédée Doublemard was erected by public subscription opened in 1879 by the newspaper La Chanson and destroyed in 1941. It was replaced in 1953 by the present statue in stone, Henri Lagriffoul.
Another statue is made of a bust on a pedestal, which is registered At B. Wilhelm founder 1781-1842 The Orphéon French, above a medallion portrait and the text To Eugene Delaporte propagator 1818-1886 .
On 26 October 2007, a monument was inaugurated on the lawn of the main square of the Temple. It carries the names and ages of 85 little ones who do not have time to attend school, Jewish children from 2 months to 6 years living in the 3rd arrondissement and deported between 1942 and 1944 and then murdered in Auschwitz. This monument was unveiled in the presence of several hundred people, the elect of the district and the city, representatives of associations and the Sons and Daughters of Jewish Deportees from France. The memorial is one of several honouring the 11,400 Jewish children deported from France. The lists of children were compiled from school and civic records by Serge Klarsfeld.
Square du temple, Haut Marais, Paris
Lunchtime at the square du Temple, 3rd arrondissement, Paris.
Square du temple
Découvrez le square du temple, dessiné par Alphand, ingénieur des promenades du Baron Haussmann.
En savoir plus :
Square du Temple, Paris, June 13, 2015 (HD)
Almost everything one might find in a large Paris park - in miniature - in a space about the size of a city block. It was especially crowded in the afternoon because of unseasonably warm weather. Excerpted from Five Paris Parks
A Walk Down Rue du Temple, Paris
Starting at Place de la République and ending down in the Marais, in enlightening walk on Rue du Temple, 3rd Arrondissement, Paris.
It is one of the oldest streets in Paris, running 1,335 metres and linking Rue de Rivoli and Place de la République. Rue du Temple is named after the Knights Templar, who set up their headquarters in Paris in 1140, building a formidable fortified city in what is today the Marais district.
As European support for the Crusades dwindled, other forces were at work that sought to disband the Order and claim the mind-blowing wealth of the Templars as their own. The last Grand Master, Jacques de Molay, was burned at the stake in front Notre Dame.
As he died he cursed Philip IV of France and Pope Clement V, saying that he would meet them with God before the year was out. Pope Clement died a month later, and King Philip died later that year in a hunting accident.
There are various legends concerning an incalculable treasure that some Templars managed to hide and has never been found; some speculate that they could be buried in the recesses of the fortress.
Jacques Hillairet writes in his Dictionnaire Historique des rues de Paris that remnants of fortifications dating back to the time of King Philip II can still be found at numbers 69 and 71.
Paris Luxury Apartment for Sale in the Marais, Overlooking Square du Temple
This is an elegant and charming 3 bedroom apartment (132,18 m² living space) with balconies and open views over the gorgeous park Square du Temple located in the Marais. Situated on the 1st floor (with elevator) of a well kept and prestigious Haussmannian building, the property has a lot of character. It features superb crown moldings, original herringbone parquet, generous ceiling heights as well as a fireplace in all main rooms. It is surprisingly soundproof, even with open windows. The apartment is bright and airy, has beautiful views over the park, a flexible floor plan and offers the wonderful opportunity to live in a quiet, and yet lively, central neighborhood.
The apartment has a large entrance giving access to a spacious living room, 3 nicely sized bedrooms, a dine-in kitchen, a majestic bathroom with bathtub, shower and fireplace (!!!), as well as a separate WC.
APARTMENT VEEVE - SQUARE DU TEMPLE COMFORT - Paris, France
Book this hotel at a discount -
#Apartment_Veeve_-_Square_du_Temple_comfort #booking #hotel #review #Paris
In the 3rd arr. District of Paris, close to Pompidou Center, Veeve - Square du Temple comfort has free WiFi and a washing machine. This apartment is 2.4 km from Louvre Museum and 3.2 km from Notre Dame. The apartment comes with 3 separate bedrooms, 1 bathroom, a fully equipped kitchen with a dining area and dishwasher, and a living room with a TV. Opéra Bastille is 1.8 km from the apartment, while Sainte Chapelle is 2.3 km from the property. The nearest airport is Orly Airport, 17.7 km from Veeve - Square du Temple comfort.
Le Temple , l'Enclos du Temple et le Donjon
Une reconstitution minutieuse de l'enclos du Temple dans sont état à la fin du Moyen Age.
Temple (Paris)
Video Software we use:
Ad-free videos.
You can support us by purchasing something through our Amazon-Url, thanks :)
The Square du Temple is a garden in Paris, France in the 3rd arrondissement, established in 1857.It is one of 24 city squares planned and created by Georges-Eugène Haussmann and Jean-Charles Alphand.The Square occupies the site of a medieval fortress in Paris, built by the Knights Templar.Parts of the fortress were later used as a prison during the French Revolution, and then demolished by the mid 19th century.
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
About the author(s): Unknown (French art) Alternative names École française (peinture) Description French painter Work location France Authority control 18th century
License: Public domain
Author(s): French art
---Image-Copyright-and-Permission---
This channel is dedicated to make Wikipedia, one of the biggest knowledge databases in the world available to people with limited vision.
Article available under a Creative Commons license
Image source in video
At the pond of Square Du Temple in Paris
A Walk Down Rue Vieille-du-Temple, Le Marais, Paris
Rue Vieille-du-Temple is an old road in the 3rd and 4th arrondissements, which is located in the heart of the Marais district of Paris.
Currently, the 855-metre-long Rue Vieille-du-Temple is located in the 3rd and 4th arrondissements, Archives, Saint-Gervais and Enfants-Rouges, and starts at 36 Rue de Rivoli and ends at 1 Rue de Bretagne.
This road was partly built in 1250.
An ancient name Old Temple Street.
It is quoted in Le Dit des rues de Paris de Guillot de Paris in the form of Street of the Temple.
This path was cut in half by the wall of Philip Augustus. The part then located outside Paris was successively called Street of the Culture-du-Temple, Rue de la Couture-du-Temple, Rue de la Fence-du-Temple because it led to culture, that is, to the gardens and the fence of the Temple. In some respects, this part is also referred to as Rue de l'Égout and Temple Sewer Street because of the sewer that passed through it.
The intramural part, between Baudoyer Square and Philippe Auguste's precinct, was referred to as Rue de la Porte-Barbette, Rue de la Poterne-Barbette, Rue Barbette and Rue Vieille-Barbette because it led to the Barbette Hotel and the door. Barbette, located near the street of Paradis.
On November 23, 1407, leaving the Hotel Barbette (formerly located on the current street of the same name), the Duke of Orleans was assassinated in front of the present Amelot Hotel in Bisseuil (located some 180 meters away). This event marks the beginning of the civil war between Armagnacs and Bourguignons.
After the construction of the charles V enclosure, the two parts, intramural and extra-mural, of the course take are united under the name of Old Street-of-The-Temple.
A ministerial decision of 19 germinal an VIII (April 9, 1800), signed by L. Bonaparte, sets the width of this public road at 10 meters. The slightest width of this lane was increased to 14 metres, under a royal ordinance of 23 June 1830.
In the 19th century, 940-metre-long Rue Vieille-du-Temple began at Nos. 15-17, Rue Saint-Antoine and ended at No. 1 Normandy Street and 89 St. Louis-en-Ile Street.
LA TOUR DU TEMPLE DE PARIS
Restitution de la Tour du Temple de Paris à l'époque des Templiers.
© TEMPLE DE PARIS
© GREZ PROD
Pour plus d'information :
Paris's Rive Droite | The Right Bank and the Marais
La Rive Droite - Paris Right Bank & The Marais
Here are some inspiring vacation ideas for your next trip to Paris --The Rive Droite (the right bank of the river Seine) and the Marais -- the oldest area of Paris.
Take a journey with Paris Rental Connections and view the wonderful sites that Paris right bank has to offer -- sit back and enjoy the trip to some of the greatest spots in Paris!
Visit the Madeleine church a temple build to glorify Napoleon's army, Place de la Concorde with its golden neo-classical fountain and giant 3,000 year old Egyptian obelisk, the Jeu de Paume museum of contemporary art, le Jardin des Tuileries - gardens first commissioned by Catherine de Medicis as part of her new palace in 1559 and later taken over by future kings like Henry IV, Louis XIII, Louis XIV and Lenotre.
The historic Louvre museum that contains more than 35,000 works and is the most visited museum in the world. Place des Vosges built in 1612 and inaugurated for the wedding of Louis XII and Anne of Austria, Les Archives Nationales created during the French revolution, the church of St Paul, the Dome de St Paul.
The Marche des Enfants Rouges the oldest covered market in Paris, Square du Temple with over 200 plants and a children's play area and kiosque.
Get a glimpse of some of our Luxury accommodation in the area, then check out the Centre Georges Pompidou modern art museum, Notre Dame cathedral on the Ile de la Cite an historic example of French gothic architecture and Hotel de Ville -- City hall, before heading off to the Champs Elysees and Arc de Triomphe by Night.
Inauguration du square du Temple – Elie Wiesel 29 juin 2017, Paris
Ne pas diffuser ou partager sans autorisation.
Contact : contact@clementlanot.fr
TOUT USAGE COMMERCIAL OU NON COMMERCIAL STRICTEMENT INTERDIT SANS ACCORD.
ALL COMMERCIAL OR NON-COMMERCIAL USES ARE STRICTLY PROHIBITED WITHOUT PERMISSION.
Public Invited to Tour Paris France Temple
“Members of the Church in France have been looking forward to a temple to be built for years,” said Bishop Gérald Caussé, Presiding Bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, about the Church’s newly-completed Paris France Temple that will open later this month for free public tours. “It’s an answer to prayers,” he said.
The public is invited to tour the new temple from Saturday, April 22, 2017, through Saturday, May 13, 2017, except for the Sundays of April 23 and 30 and May 7.
Square du Temple - GYJO - Moanin'
Moanin', performed by the Gloucestershire Youth Jazz Orchestra at the Square du Temple in Paris.
A Walk Around Square du Vert-Galant, Paris
The site is located at the western tip of the island of Ile de la Cite', in the Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois district of the 1st arrondissement. The level of the square is located seven meters lower than the current level of other parts of the island, which corresponds to the level it once had. The low overhang of the square in relation to the Seine explains that it is flooded or even completely submerged during the most important floods of the river.
It is served by the line M7 at the Pont-Neuf metro station.
The square owes its name to Henry IV, nicknamed the Green-Galant because of his many mistresses despite his advanced age. The square is dominated by an equestrian statue of Henry IV resting on the Pont Neuf (which separates the square from the rest of the island).
It was created by the meeting of several small islands including the island of the Jews, where the last Templars were burned, and the island of the Patriarch. A commemorative plaque reminds us that it was here that, on 18 March 1314, the execution of the last grand master of the Order of the Temple, Jacques de Molay, took place at the stake.
The Square was dedicated to baths around 1765, then to a concert café in 1865. It was destroyed by a flood in 18791,.
In 1884, the state ceded the land to the city of Paris.
In 2007, the square was awarded the green green spaces label by ECOCERT.
You can see tuberculated swans, a few ducks such as fuligule milouin and fuligule morillon, shepherdesses of streams or knights guignette, castagneous grebes and grebes. In winter, there are also white-fronted macro scarves, water hens, silver gulls and laughing gulls.
In 2009, it is home to a large population of urban murids.
In 1804, the architect Guy de Gisors laid out a project to create baths that would have been called Napoleon I. It was a large building with four floors of arcades and two wings in return of square in the middle of which the waters of a fountain would have sprung. The building was to house a hundred and seventy-six bathing cabins. There were also plans to build an outdoor pool for bathers, which would have been accessed by a double-changing staircase. The emperor did not act on this proposal. On the other hand, in 1810 the latter launched an open competition under a decree signed at the camp of Schonbrunn: it was to raise, on the full land of the Pont Neuf, a granite obelisk of Cherbourg, with an inscription Emperor Napoleon to the French people; the obelisk was to be 180 feet high.
A Walk Around Le Carreau Du Temple, Paris
The Carreau du Temple is a covered market in the 3rd arrondissement of Paris, built in 1863. As part of a public consultation exercise undertaken in 2004 the local population voted that the Carreau should be redeveloped as polyvalent public space. The Carreau is scheduled to reopen in 2013.
The carreau is situated near the former site of the Temple, the medieval enclosure of the Knights Templar, which gained notoriety as the prison where the Royal family were held during the French Revolution.
In 1811 a wooden structure was erected on the site to house a permanent market, which was replaced by the current cast iron, brick and glass structure in 1863. The market specialised in selling clothes, but has declined in popularity.
Major renovation of the Carreau du Temple is due to be completed by the end of 2013. During the work, the building was stripped to its metallic structure. Various facilities will be created below ground level and on the main floor. Among the new facilities is a 250-seat auditorium and 19,000 sq ft of multipurpose space at ground level, and below ground level, sport and cultural facilities, including a recording studio. The capacity of the renovated building will be 2800 persons.
Tourists in Paris... Square du Temple - Elie Wiesel
Lifestyle in Paris... This peaceful park is located in front of the city hall in the 3rd borough. It's a perfect place for a quiet walk and a relaxing time.