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6th arrondissement of Paris

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6th arrondissement of Paris
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{{short description|Municipal arrondissement in ÃŽle-de-France, France}}







factoids
population_as_of}}population_footnotes}} | area = 2.154| image_map = Paris 6e arr jms.gif| map_caption = Location within Paris| image_skyline = Les Deux Magots, Paris 25 May 2014.jpgBoulevard Saint-Germain| image_shield = Blason ville fr Paris VI.svg150px|Logo)| mayor = Jean-Pierre LecoqThe Republicans (France)>LR| term = 2020–2026482256region:FR-IDF_type:city|display=inline,title}}}}{{Arrondissements of Paris}}The 6th arrondissement of Paris (VIe arrondissement) is one of the 20 arrondissements of the capital city of France. In spoken French, it is referred to as le sixième.The arrondissement, called Luxembourg in a reference to the seat of the Senate and its garden, is situated on the Rive Gauche of the River Seine. It includes educational institutions such as the , the and the Institut de France, as well as Parisian monuments such as the Odéon-Théâtre de l'Europe, the Pont des Arts, which links the 1st and 6th arrondissements over the Seine, Saint-Germain Abbey and Saint-Sulpice Church.This central arrondissement, which includes the historic districts of Saint-Germain-des-Prés (surrounding the abbey founded in the 6th century) and Luxembourg (surrounding the Palace and its Gardens), has played a major role throughout Parisian history. It is well known for its café culture and the revolutionary existentialism intellectualism of the authors that lived there, including Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Gertrude Stein, Paul Éluard, Boris Vian, Albert Camus and Françoise Sagan.With its cityscape, intellectual tradition, history, architecture and central location, the arrondissement has long been home to French intelligentsia. It is a major locale for art galleries and fashion storesWEB,weblink Rue de Sèvres. Hermès store. Paris, 2018, Paris Digest, 2018-11-21, and is one of Paris's most expensive area and one of France's richest districts in terms of average income. It is part of what is called Paris Ouest (Paris West) alongside the 7th, 8th and 16th arrondissements, as well as the Neuilly-sur-Seine inner suburb.

History

The current 6th arrondissement, dominated by the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés—founded in the 6th century—was the heart of the Catholic Church's power in Paris for centuries, hosting many religious institutions.File:Le Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris, France - panoramio (20).jpg|thumb|left|The Luxembourg Palace on the Rue de Vaugirard houses the Senate.]]In 1612, Queen Marie de Médicis bought an estate in the district and commissioned architect Salomon de Brosse to transform it into the outstanding Luxembourg Palace surrounded by extensive royal gardens. The new Luxembourg Palace turned the neighbourhood into a fashionable district for French nobility.In the aftermath of the French Revolution, architect Jean-François-Thérèse Chalgrin was commissioned to redesign the Luxembourg Palace in 1800 to make it the seat of the newly-established Sénat conservateur. Nowadays, the grounds around the Luxembourg Palace, known as the Senate Garden (Jardin du Sénat), are open to the public; they have become a prised Parisian garden across from the 5th arrondissement's Panthéon.Since the 1950s, the arrondissement, with its many higher education institutions, cafés (Café de Flore, , La Palette, Café Procope) and publishing houses (Gallimard, Julliard, Grasset) has been the home of much of the major post-war intellectual and literary movements and some of most influential in history such as surrealism, existentialism and modern feminism.{{clr|left}}

Geography

(File:Paris 6th.png|right|thumb|300px|Map of the 6th arrondissement)File:Metro 6to arrondissement.png|300px|thumbnail|Métro map of the 6th arrondissement]](File:Paris 6e arrondissement - Quartiers.svg|right|thumb|300px|Quarters of the 6th arrondissement)The land area of the arrondissement is 2.154 km2 (0.832 sq. mile, or 532 acres).

Cityscape

File:Hôtel Lutetia, Paris 6e 3.jpg|Palace Hôtel LutetiaFile:Immeuble boulevard Saint-Germain, rue Saint-Jacques, Paris 5e.jpg|Corner between Boulevard Saint-Germain and Rue Saint-JacquesFile:P1110475 Paris VI rue de Tournon rwk.JPG|Rue Tournon

Places of interest



Museums

Colleges and universities

Former places

Main streets and squares

{{div col|colwidth=35em}}
  • Place du 18-Juin-1940
  • Rue de l'Abbaye
  • Rue de l'Ancienne Comédie
  • Rue André-Mazet
  • Rue d'Assas
  • Rue Auguste Comte
  • Rue de Beaux Arts
  • Rue Bonaparte
  • Rue Bréa
    • named after General Jean Baptiste Fidèle Bréa (1790–1848)
  • Rue de Buci
    • named after Simon de Buci, President of the Parlement of Paris, who had purchased the Gate Saint-Germain (now demolished) in 1350
  • Rue des Canettes
  • Rue Cassette
  • Rue du Cherche-Midi
  • Rue Christine
  • Rue de Condé
  • Quai de Conti
  • Rue Danton
  • Passage Dauphine
  • Rue Dauphine
  • Rue du Dragon
  • Rue Duguay-Trouin
  • Rue Dupin
  • Rue de l'École de Médecine
  • Rue de Fleurus
  • Rue du Four
  • Place de Furstemberg
  • Rue de Furstemberg
  • Rue Garancière
  • Quai des Grands-Augustins
  • Rue des Grands Augustins
  • Rue Grégoire de Tours
  • Rue Guisarde
  • Rue Guynemer
  • Rue Hautefeuille
  • Place Henri Mondor
  • Rue Jacques Callot
  • Rue du Jardinet
  • Rue Jacob
  • Rue Lobineau
  • Rue Mabillon
  • Rue Madame
  • Quai Malaquais
  • Rue Mayet
  • Rue Mazarine
  • Rue de Médicis
  • Rue de Mézières
  • Rue Mignon
  • Rue Monsieur-le-Prince
  • Boulevard du Montparnasse
  • Rue de Nesle
  • Rue de Nevers
  • Rue Notre-Dame des Champs
  • Carrefour de l'Odéon
  • Rue de l'Odéon
  • Rue Palatine
  • Rue Pierre Sarrazin
  • Rue des Poitevins
  • Rue du Pont de Lodi
  • Rue Princesse
  • Rue des Quatre Vents
  • Place du Québec
  • Boulevard Raspail
  • Rue de Rennes
  • Rue Saint-André-des-Arts
  • Rue Saint-Benoît
  • Boulevard Saint-Germain (partial)
  • Rue Saint-Jean-Baptiste de la Salle
  • Boulevard Saint-Michel (partial)
  • Place Saint-Michel (partial)
  • Place Saint-Sulpice
  • Rue Saint-Sulpice
  • Rue des Saints Pères
  • Rue de Savoie
  • Rue de Seine
  • Rue de Sèvres
  • Rue Stanislas
    • named after the nearby collège Stanislas, founded under Louis XVIII of France, and named after one of his first names
  • Rue de Tournon
  • Rue de Vaugirard (partial)
  • Rue Vavin
    • named after the 19th-century politician Alexis Vavin
  • Rue Visconti
    • named after Louis Visconti (1791–1853), designer of Napoleon's tomb
{{div col end}}

Demography

The arrondissement attained its peak population in 1911 when the population density reached nearly 50,000 inhabitants per km2. In 2009, the population was 43,143 inhabitants while the arrondissement provided 43,691 jobs.

Economy

Toei Animation Europe has its head office in the arrondissement. The company, which opened in 2004, serves France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom."AFFILIATED COMPANIES {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151019043547weblink |date=2015-10-19 }}". Toei Animation. Retrieved on November 17, 2011. "37 rue du Four 75006 Paris France".

Real estate

The 6th and 7th arrondissements are the most expensive districts of Paris, the most expensive parts of the 6th arrondissement being Saint-Germain-des-Prés quarter, the riverside districts and the areas nearby the Luxembourg Garden.

Historical population{| class"wikitable"

! Year(of French censuses)! Population! Density(inh. per km²)| 1872| 90,288| 41,994(peak of population)}}| 102,993| 47,815| 1954| 88,200| 41,023| 1962| 80,262| 37,262| 1968| 70,891| 32,911| 1975| 56,331| 26,152| 1982| 48,905| 22,704| 1990| 47,891| 22,234| 1999| 44,919| 20,854| 2009| 43,143| 20,067

Immigration

{{France immigration| collectivity_name = the 6th arrondissement| census_year = 1999| metropolitan_France = 79.6| outside_metropolitan_France = 20.4| overseas_France = 0.6| foreign_French = 5.0| EU-15 = 6.1| non-EU-15 = 8.7}}

Notable people

References

{{reflist}}

External links

{{Commons category}}{{Wikivoyage|Paris/6th arrondissement|6th arrondissement}}{{Paris}}{{Authority control}}

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