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Montmartre

Montmartre (UK: /mɒnˈmɑːrtrə/ mon-MAR-trə,[1][2][3] French: [mɔ̃maʁtʁ] (listen)) is a large hill in Paris's northern 18th arrondissement. It is 130 m (430 ft) high and gives its name to the surrounding district, part of the Right Bank. Montmartre is primarily known for its artistic history, for the white-domed Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur on its summit, and as a nightclub district.

Montmartre seen from Notre Dame de Paris, including the Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur
A Garden in Montmartre by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1880s)
Montmartre
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Location of Montmartre in Paris

The other church on the hill, Saint Pierre de Montmartre, built in 1147, was the church of the prestigious Montmartre Abbey. On 15 August 1534, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, Saint Francis Xavier and five other companions bound themselves by vows in the Martyrium of Saint Denis, 11 Rue Yvonne Le Tac, the first step in the creation of the Jesuits.[4]

Near the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th, during the Belle Époque, many artists lived, worked, or had studios in or around Montmartre, including Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Edgar Degas, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Suzanne Valadon, Piet Mondrian, Pablo Picasso, Camille Pissarro and Vincent van Gogh. Montmartre is also the setting for several hit films.

The area is served by Métro, with Line 2 stations at Barbès–Rochechouart, Anvers, Pigalle and Blanche, Line 4 stations at Château Rouge and Barbès–Rochechouart, as well as Line 12 stations at Pigalle, Abbesses, Lamarck–Caulaincourt and Jules Joffrin. It is also served by the Montmartre Funicular. The historic district established by the City of Paris in 1995 is bordered by Rue Caulaincourt and Rue Custine on the north, the Rue de Clignancourt on the east and the Boulevard de Clichy and Boulevard de Rochechouart to the south,[5] containing 60 ha (150 acres).[6]

Etymology

The toponym Mons Martis, Latin for "Mount of Mars", survived into Merovingian times, gallicised as Montmartre.[7]

History

 
Saint-Pierre de Montmartre (originally 1133, much of it destroyed in 1790 and rebuilt in the 19th century) seen from the dome of the Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur
 
The Moulin de la Galette, painted by Vincent van Gogh in 1887 (Carnegie Museum of Art)

Archaeological excavations show that the heights of Montmartre were occupied from at least Gallo-Roman times. Texts from the 8th century cite the name of mons Mercori (Mount Mercury); a 9th-century text speaks of Mount Mars. Excavations in 1975 north of the Church of Saint-Pierre found coins from the 3rd century and the remains of a major wall. Earlier excavations in the 17th century at the Fontaine-du-But (2 rue Pierre-Dac) found vestiges of Roman baths from the 2nd century.[5]

 
The Chapel of the Martyrs of Montmartre Abbey in the 17th century

The butte owes its particular religious importance to the text entitled Miracles of Saint-Denis, written before 885 by Hilduin, abbot of the monastery of Saint-Denis, which recounted how Saint Denis, a Christian bishop, was decapitated on the hilltop in 250 AD on orders of the Roman prefect Fescennius Sisinius for preaching the Christian faith to the Gallo-Roman inhabitants of Lutetia. According to Hilduin, Denis collected his head and carried it as far as the fontaine Saint-Denis (on modern impasse Girardon), then descended the north slope of the hill, where he died. Hilduin wrote that a church had been built "in the place formerly called Mont de Mars, and then, by a happy change, 'Mont des Martyrs'."[5]

In 1134, king Louis VI purchased the Merovingian chapel and built on the site the church of Saint-Pierre de Montmartre, still standing. He also founded the Royal Abbey of Montmartre, a monastery of the Benedictine order, whose buildings, gardens and fields occupied most of Montmartre. He also built a small chapel, called the Martyrium, at the site where it was believed that Saint Denis had been decapitated. It became a popular pilgrimage site. In the 17th century, a priory called abbaye d'en bas was built at that site, and in 1686 it was occupied by a community of nuns.[5]

The abbey was destroyed in 1790 during the French Revolution, and the convent demolished to make place for gypsum mines. The church of Saint-Pierre was saved. At the place where the chapel of the Martyrs was located (now 11 rue Yvonne-Le Tac), an oratory was built in 1855. It was renovated in 1994.[5]

By the 15th century, the north and northeast slopes of the hill were the site of a village surrounded by vineyards, gardens and orchards of peach and cherry trees. The first mills were built on the western slope in 1529, grinding wheat, barley and rye. There were thirteen mills at one time, though by the late nineteenth century only two remained,[5]

During the 1590 Siege of Paris, in the last decade of the French Wars of Religion, Henry IV placed his artillery on top of the butte of Montmartre to fire down into the city. The siege eventually failed when a large relief force approached and forced Henry to withdraw.

In 1790, Montmartre was located just outside the limits of Paris. That year, under the revolutionary government of the National Constituent Assembly, it became the commune of Montmartre, with its town hall located on place du Tertre, site of the former abbey. The main businesses of the commune were wine making, stone quarries and gypsum mines. (See Mines of Paris). The mining of gypsum had begun in the Gallo-Roman period, first in open air mines and then underground, and continued until 1860. The gypsum was cut into blocks, baked, then ground and put into sacks. Sold as 'montmartarite, it was used for plaster, because of its resistance to fire and water. Between the 7th and 9th centuries, most of the sarcophagi found in ancient sites were made of molded gypsum. In modern times, the mining was done with explosives, which riddled the ground under the butte with tunnels, making the ground very unstable and difficult to build upon. The construction of the Basilica of Sacré-Cœur required making a special foundation that descended 40 metres under the ground to hold the structure in place.[8] A fossil tooth found in one of these mines was identified by Georges Cuvier as an extinct equine, which he dubbed Palaeotherium, the "ancient animal". His sketch of the entire animal in 1825 was matched by a skeleton discovered later.[9]

19th century

 
The Bal du moulin de la Galette by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1876) showed a Sunday afternoon dance in Montmartre.
 
Construction of the Sacré-Cœur, 10 March 1882

Russian soldiers occupied Montmartre during the Battle of Paris in 1814. They used the altitude of the hill for artillery bombardment of the city.

Montmartre remained outside of the city limits of Paris until January 1, 1860, when it was annexed to the city along with other communities (faubourgs) surrounding Paris, and became part of the 18th arrondissement of Paris.

In 1871, Montmartre was the site of the beginning of the revolutionary uprising of the Paris Commune. During the Franco-Prussian War, the French army had stored a large number of cannon in a park at the top of the hill, near where the basilica is today. On 18 March 1871, the soldiers from the French Army tried to remove the cannon from the hilltop. They were blocked by members of the politically-radicalised Paris National Guard, who captured and then killed two French army generals, and installed a revolutionary government that lasted two months. The heights of Montmartre were retaken by the French Army with heavy fighting at the end of May 1871, during what became known as the Semaine Sanglante, or "Bloody Week".[10]

In 1870, the future French prime minister during World War I, Georges Clemenceau, was appointed mayor of the 18th arrondissement, including Montmartre, by the new government of the Third Republic, and was also elected to the National Assembly. A member of the radical republican party, Clemenceau tried unsuccessfully to find a peaceful compromise between the even more radical Paris Commune and the more conservative French government. The Commune refused to recognize him as mayor, and seized the town hall. He ran for a seat in the council of the Paris Commune, but received less than eight hundred votes. He did not participate in the Commune, and was out of the city when the Commune was suppressed by the French army. In 1876, he again was elected as deputy for Montmartre and the 18th arrondissement.[11]

The Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur was built on Montmartre from 1876 to 1919, financed by public subscription as a gesture of expiation for the suffering of France during the Franco-Prussian War. Its white dome is a highly visible landmark in the city, and near it artists set up their easels each day amidst the tables and colourful umbrellas of the place du Tertre.

By the 19th century, the butte was famous for its cafés, guinguettes with public dancing, and cabarets. Le Chat Noir at 84 boulevard de Rochechouart was founded in 1881 by Rodolphe Salis, and became a popular haunt for writers and poets. The composer Eric Satie earned money by playing the piano there. The Moulin Rouge at 94 boulevard de Clichy was founded in 1889 by Joseph Oller and Charles Zidler; it became the birthplace of the French cancan.[12] Artists who performed in the cabarets of Montmartre included Yvette Guilbert, Marcelle Lender, Aristide Bruant, La Goulue, Georges Guibourg, Mistinguett, Fréhel, Jane Avril, and Damia.

Artists gather

 
Théophile Steinlen's advertisement for the tour of Le Chat Noir cabaret

During the Belle Époque from 1872 to 1914, many artists lived and worked in Montmartre, where the rents were low and the atmosphere congenial. Pierre-Auguste Renoir rented space at 12 rue Cortot in 1876 to paint Bal du moulin de la Galette, showing a dance at Montmartre on a Sunday afternoon. Maurice Utrillo lived at the same address from 1906 to 1914, and Raoul Dufy shared an atelier there from 1901 to 1911. The building is now the Musée de Montmartre.[13] Pablo Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani and other artists lived and worked in a building called Le Bateau-Lavoir during the years 1904–1909, where Picasso painted one of his most important masterpieces, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon. Several composers, including Erik Satie, lived in the neighbourhood. Most of the artists left after the outbreak of World War I, the majority of them going to the Montparnasse quarter.[14]

Artists' associations such as Les Nabis and the Incohérents were formed and individuals including Vincent van Gogh, Pierre Brissaud, Alfred Jarry, Jacques Villon, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, Henri Matisse, André Derain, Suzanne Valadon, Edgar Degas, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Théophile Steinlen, and African-American expatriates such as Langston Hughes worked in Montmartre[15] and drew some of their inspiration from the area.

The last of the bohemian Montmartre artists was Gen Paul (1895–1975), born in Montmartre and a friend of Utrillo. Paul's calligraphic expressionist lithographs, sometimes memorializing picturesque Montmartre itself, owe a lot to Raoul Dufy.

Among the last of the neighborhood's bohemian gathering places was R-26, an artistic salon frequented by Josephine Baker, Le Corbusier and Django Reinhardt. Its name was commemorated by Reinhardt in his 1947 tune "R. vingt-six".[16]

Modern-day

 
The view from the butte looking towards Centre Georges Pompidou
 
The Montmartre "petit train" doing its rounds near the Moulin Rouge cabaret
 
The stairs of the Rue Foyatier
 
Vineyard in the Rue Saint-Vincent; the day of the Feast of gardens, 15 days after harvest

There is a small vineyard in the Rue Saint-Vincent, which continues the tradition of wine production in the Île de France; it yields about 500 litres per year.[17]

The Musée de Montmartre is in the house where the painters Maurice Utrillo and Suzanne Valadon lived and worked in second-floor studios. The house was Pierre-Auguste Renoir's first Montmartre address. Many other personalities moved through the premises. The mansion in the garden at the back is the oldest hotel on Montmartre, and one of its first owners was Claude de la Rose, a 17th-century actor known as Rosimond, who bought it in 1680. Claude de la Rose was the actor who replaced Molière, and who, like his predecessor, died on stage.

Nearby, day and night, tourists visit such sights as Place du Tertre and the cabaret du Lapin Agile, where the artists had worked and gathered. Many renowned artists, such as painter and sculptor Edgar Degas and film director François Truffaut, are buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre and the Cimetière Saint-Vincent. Near the top of the butte, Espace Dalí showcases surrealist artist Salvador Dalí's work. Montmartre is an officially designated historic district with limited development allowed in order to maintain its historic character.

An inclined railway, the Funiculaire de Montmartre, operated by the RATP, ascends the hill from the south while the Montmartre bus circles the hill.

Downhill to the southwest is the red-light district of Pigalle. That area is, today, largely known for a wide variety of stores specializing in instruments for rock music. There are also several concert halls, also used for rock music. The actual Moulin Rouge theatre is also in Pigalle, near the Blanche métro station.

In popular culture

Literature

  • The 1950 novel Inspector Maigret and the Strangled Stripper is set in and around Montmartre.
  • Roy Walton, the English card magician, named a card trick Montmartre published in The Complete Walton Volume 1. It features many climaxes throughout the trick including colour changes and card swaps.

Films

Songs

  • In "La Bohème", a 1965 song by singer-songwriter Charles Aznavour, a painter recalls his youthful years in a Montmartre that has, for him, ceased to exist: "I no longer recognize/Either the walls or the streets/That had seen my youth/At the top of a staircase/I look for my studio/Of which nothing survives/In its new décor/Montmartre seems sad/And the lilacs are dead'). The song is a farewell to what, according to Aznavour, were the last days of Montmartre as a site of bohemian activity.
  • The Slade song "Far Far Away" mentions it in passing in the third verse: "I've seen the Paris lights from high upon Montmartre/And felt the silence hanging low in No Man's Land".

Video games

  • In the 2019 mobile game Mario Kart Tour, the Montmartre is a notable landmark appearing in the background of the "Paris Promenade" course.

Main sights

 
The artist's home and studio Le Bateau-Lavoir, c.1910. The building, at No. 13 Rue Ravignan at Place Emile Goudeau, was later burned in a fire and rebuilt.
 
Wall of Love on Montmartre: "I love you" in 250 languages, by calligraphist Fédéric Baron and artist Claire Kito (2000)

Notable people

See: Category:People of Montmartre

  • Barbara Pravi, French singer (born 1993), (born in another town, but moved when very young)[18]

See also

References

  1. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2020-03-22.
  2. ^ "Montmartre". Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. Longman. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  3. ^ "Montmartre". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Montmartre, Paris' last village. Facts". Paris Digest. 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Dictionnaire historique de Paris, p. 477.
  6. ^ Dictionnaire historique de Paris, p. 476
  7. ^ Young, Bailey K. (Autumn 1978). "Archaeology in an Urban Setting: Excavations at Saint-Pierre-de-Montmartre, Paris, 1975–1977". Journal of Field Archaeology. 5 (3): 321.
  8. ^ Dictionnaire historique de Paris, p. 476.
  9. ^ Knell, Simon J.; Macleod, Suzanne; Watson, Sheila E. R. (1967). Museum revolutions: how museums change and are changed. Abingdon-on-Thames, England: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-44467-5.
  10. ^ Sarmant, Thierry, Histoire de Paris, p. 196.
  11. ^ Milza, Pierre, L'année terrible – La Commune (mars-juin 1871)
  12. ^ Dictionnaire historique de Paris, p. 478
  13. ^ Dictionnaire historique de Paris, (2013), La Pochothèque, (ISBN 978-2-253-13140-3)
  14. ^ Dictionnaire historique de Paris, pp. 476–480
  15. ^ See William A. Shack's Harlem in Montmartre, University of California Press, 2001. ISBN 0520225376
  16. ^ Django Reinhardt – Swing De Paris. 6 Oct. 2012. Exhibit. La Cité de la musique, Paris.
  17. ^ Information on the Clos Montmartre by Syndicat d'Initiative, retrieved 2008-09-26
  18. ^ "Barbara Pravi". Genius. Retrieved 2022-11-02.

Bibliography

  • Brigstocke, Julian. The Life of the City: Space, Humour, and the Experience of Truth in Fin-de-siècle Montmartre (Ashgate, 2014) xv + 230pp online review
  • Cate, Phillip Dennis and Mary Shaw. The Spirit of Montmartre: Cabarets, Humor, and the Avant-Garde 1875–1905 (Rutgers University Press, 1996)
  • Weisberg, Gabriel, ed. Montmartre and the Making of Mass Culture (Rutgers U. Press, 2001)

In French

  • Sarmant, Thierry (2012). Histoire de Paris: Politique, urbanisme, civilisation. Editions Jean-Paul Gisserot. ISBN 978-2-755-803303.
  • Dictionnaire Historique de Paris. Le Livre de Poche. 2013. ISBN 978-2-253-13140-3.
  • Vie quotidienne a Montmartre au temps de Picasso, 1900–1910 (Daily Life on Montmartre in the Times of Picasso) was written by Jean-Paul Crespelle, an author-historian who specialized in the artistic life of Montmartre and Montparnasse.

External links

  •   Media related to Montmartre at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 48°53′13″N 02°20′28″E / 48.88694°N 2.34111°E / 48.88694; 2.34111

montmartre, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, trə, french, maʁtʁ, listen, large, hill, paris, northern, 18th, arrondissement, high, gives, name, surrounding, district, part, right, bank, primarily, known, artistic, history, white, domed, basilica, sacré, cœur,. For other uses see Montmartre disambiguation Montmartre UK m ɒ n ˈ m ɑːr t r e mon MAR tre 1 2 3 French mɔ maʁtʁ listen is a large hill in Paris s northern 18th arrondissement It is 130 m 430 ft high and gives its name to the surrounding district part of the Right Bank Montmartre is primarily known for its artistic history for the white domed Basilica of the Sacre Cœur on its summit and as a nightclub district Montmartre seen from Notre Dame de Paris including the Basilica of the Sacre Cœur A Garden in Montmartre by Pierre Auguste Renoir 1880s Montmartreclass notpageimage Location of Montmartre in Paris The other church on the hill Saint Pierre de Montmartre built in 1147 was the church of the prestigious Montmartre Abbey On 15 August 1534 Saint Ignatius of Loyola Saint Francis Xavier and five other companions bound themselves by vows in the Martyrium of Saint Denis 11 Rue Yvonne Le Tac the first step in the creation of the Jesuits 4 Near the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th during the Belle Epoque many artists lived worked or had studios in or around Montmartre including Amedeo Modigliani Claude Monet Pierre Auguste Renoir Edgar Degas Henri de Toulouse Lautrec Suzanne Valadon Piet Mondrian Pablo Picasso Camille Pissarro and Vincent van Gogh Montmartre is also the setting for several hit films The area is served by Metro with Line 2 stations at Barbes Rochechouart Anvers Pigalle and Blanche Line 4 stations at Chateau Rouge and Barbes Rochechouart as well as Line 12 stations at Pigalle Abbesses Lamarck Caulaincourt and Jules Joffrin It is also served by the Montmartre Funicular The historic district established by the City of Paris in 1995 is bordered by Rue Caulaincourt and Rue Custine on the north the Rue de Clignancourt on the east and the Boulevard de Clichy and Boulevard de Rochechouart to the south 5 containing 60 ha 150 acres 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 19th century 3 Artists gather 4 Modern day 5 In popular culture 5 1 Literature 5 2 Films 5 3 Songs 5 4 Video games 6 Main sights 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 10 1 In French 11 External linksEtymology EditThe toponym Mons Martis Latin for Mount of Mars survived into Merovingian times gallicised as Montmartre 7 History Edit Saint Pierre de Montmartre originally 1133 much of it destroyed in 1790 and rebuilt in the 19th century seen from the dome of the Basilica of the Sacre Cœur The Moulin de la Galette painted by Vincent van Gogh in 1887 Carnegie Museum of Art Archaeological excavations show that the heights of Montmartre were occupied from at least Gallo Roman times Texts from the 8th century cite the name of mons Mercori Mount Mercury a 9th century text speaks of Mount Mars Excavations in 1975 north of the Church of Saint Pierre found coins from the 3rd century and the remains of a major wall Earlier excavations in the 17th century at the Fontaine du But 2 rue Pierre Dac found vestiges of Roman baths from the 2nd century 5 The Chapel of the Martyrs of Montmartre Abbey in the 17th century The butte owes its particular religious importance to the text entitled Miracles of Saint Denis written before 885 by Hilduin abbot of the monastery of Saint Denis which recounted how Saint Denis a Christian bishop was decapitated on the hilltop in 250 AD on orders of the Roman prefect Fescennius Sisinius for preaching the Christian faith to the Gallo Roman inhabitants of Lutetia According to Hilduin Denis collected his head and carried it as far as the fontaine Saint Denis on modern impasse Girardon then descended the north slope of the hill where he died Hilduin wrote that a church had been built in the place formerly called Mont de Mars and then by a happy change Mont des Martyrs 5 In 1134 king Louis VI purchased the Merovingian chapel and built on the site the church of Saint Pierre de Montmartre still standing He also founded the Royal Abbey of Montmartre a monastery of the Benedictine order whose buildings gardens and fields occupied most of Montmartre He also built a small chapel called the Martyrium at the site where it was believed that Saint Denis had been decapitated It became a popular pilgrimage site In the 17th century a priory called abbaye d en bas was built at that site and in 1686 it was occupied by a community of nuns 5 The abbey was destroyed in 1790 during the French Revolution and the convent demolished to make place for gypsum mines The church of Saint Pierre was saved At the place where the chapel of the Martyrs was located now 11 rue Yvonne Le Tac an oratory was built in 1855 It was renovated in 1994 5 By the 15th century the north and northeast slopes of the hill were the site of a village surrounded by vineyards gardens and orchards of peach and cherry trees The first mills were built on the western slope in 1529 grinding wheat barley and rye There were thirteen mills at one time though by the late nineteenth century only two remained 5 During the 1590 Siege of Paris in the last decade of the French Wars of Religion Henry IV placed his artillery on top of the butte of Montmartre to fire down into the city The siege eventually failed when a large relief force approached and forced Henry to withdraw In 1790 Montmartre was located just outside the limits of Paris That year under the revolutionary government of the National Constituent Assembly it became the commune of Montmartre with its town hall located on place du Tertre site of the former abbey The main businesses of the commune were wine making stone quarries and gypsum mines See Mines of Paris The mining of gypsum had begun in the Gallo Roman period first in open air mines and then underground and continued until 1860 The gypsum was cut into blocks baked then ground and put into sacks Sold as montmartarite it was used for plaster because of its resistance to fire and water Between the 7th and 9th centuries most of the sarcophagi found in ancient sites were made of molded gypsum In modern times the mining was done with explosives which riddled the ground under the butte with tunnels making the ground very unstable and difficult to build upon The construction of the Basilica of Sacre Cœur required making a special foundation that descended 40 metres under the ground to hold the structure in place 8 A fossil tooth found in one of these mines was identified by Georges Cuvier as an extinct equine which he dubbed Palaeotherium the ancient animal His sketch of the entire animal in 1825 was matched by a skeleton discovered later 9 19th century Edit The Bal du moulin de la Galette by Pierre Auguste Renoir 1876 showed a Sunday afternoon dance in Montmartre Construction of the Sacre Cœur 10 March 1882 Russian soldiers occupied Montmartre during the Battle of Paris in 1814 They used the altitude of the hill for artillery bombardment of the city Montmartre remained outside of the city limits of Paris until January 1 1860 when it was annexed to the city along with other communities faubourgs surrounding Paris and became part of the 18th arrondissement of Paris In 1871 Montmartre was the site of the beginning of the revolutionary uprising of the Paris Commune During the Franco Prussian War the French army had stored a large number of cannon in a park at the top of the hill near where the basilica is today On 18 March 1871 the soldiers from the French Army tried to remove the cannon from the hilltop They were blocked by members of the politically radicalised Paris National Guard who captured and then killed two French army generals and installed a revolutionary government that lasted two months The heights of Montmartre were retaken by the French Army with heavy fighting at the end of May 1871 during what became known as the Semaine Sanglante or Bloody Week 10 In 1870 the future French prime minister during World War I Georges Clemenceau was appointed mayor of the 18th arrondissement including Montmartre by the new government of the Third Republic and was also elected to the National Assembly A member of the radical republican party Clemenceau tried unsuccessfully to find a peaceful compromise between the even more radical Paris Commune and the more conservative French government The Commune refused to recognize him as mayor and seized the town hall He ran for a seat in the council of the Paris Commune but received less than eight hundred votes He did not participate in the Commune and was out of the city when the Commune was suppressed by the French army In 1876 he again was elected as deputy for Montmartre and the 18th arrondissement 11 The Basilica of the Sacre Cœur was built on Montmartre from 1876 to 1919 financed by public subscription as a gesture of expiation for the suffering of France during the Franco Prussian War Its white dome is a highly visible landmark in the city and near it artists set up their easels each day amidst the tables and colourful umbrellas of the place du Tertre By the 19th century the butte was famous for its cafes guinguettes with public dancing and cabarets Le Chat Noir at 84 boulevard de Rochechouart was founded in 1881 by Rodolphe Salis and became a popular haunt for writers and poets The composer Eric Satie earned money by playing the piano there The Moulin Rouge at 94 boulevard de Clichy was founded in 1889 by Joseph Oller and Charles Zidler it became the birthplace of the French cancan 12 Artists who performed in the cabarets of Montmartre included Yvette Guilbert Marcelle Lender Aristide Bruant La Goulue Georges Guibourg Mistinguett Frehel Jane Avril and Damia Artists gather Edit Theophile Steinlen s advertisement for the tour of Le Chat Noir cabaret During the Belle Epoque from 1872 to 1914 many artists lived and worked in Montmartre where the rents were low and the atmosphere congenial Pierre Auguste Renoir rented space at 12 rue Cortot in 1876 to paint Bal du moulin de la Galette showing a dance at Montmartre on a Sunday afternoon Maurice Utrillo lived at the same address from 1906 to 1914 and Raoul Dufy shared an atelier there from 1901 to 1911 The building is now the Musee de Montmartre 13 Pablo Picasso Amedeo Modigliani and other artists lived and worked in a building called Le Bateau Lavoir during the years 1904 1909 where Picasso painted one of his most important masterpieces Les Demoiselles d Avignon Several composers including Erik Satie lived in the neighbourhood Most of the artists left after the outbreak of World War I the majority of them going to the Montparnasse quarter 14 Artists associations such as Les Nabis and the Incoherents were formed and individuals including Vincent van Gogh Pierre Brissaud Alfred Jarry Jacques Villon Raymond Duchamp Villon Henri Matisse Andre Derain Suzanne Valadon Edgar Degas Henri de Toulouse Lautrec Theophile Steinlen and African American expatriates such as Langston Hughes worked in Montmartre 15 and drew some of their inspiration from the area The last of the bohemian Montmartre artists was Gen Paul 1895 1975 born in Montmartre and a friend of Utrillo Paul s calligraphic expressionist lithographs sometimes memorializing picturesque Montmartre itself owe a lot to Raoul Dufy Among the last of the neighborhood s bohemian gathering places was R 26 an artistic salon frequented by Josephine Baker Le Corbusier and Django Reinhardt Its name was commemorated by Reinhardt in his 1947 tune R vingt six 16 Modern day Edit The view from the butte looking towards Centre Georges Pompidou The Montmartre petit train doing its rounds near the Moulin Rouge cabaret The stairs of the Rue Foyatier Vineyard in the Rue Saint Vincent the day of the Feast of gardens 15 days after harvest There is a small vineyard in the Rue Saint Vincent which continues the tradition of wine production in the Ile de France it yields about 500 litres per year 17 The Musee de Montmartre is in the house where the painters Maurice Utrillo and Suzanne Valadon lived and worked in second floor studios The house was Pierre Auguste Renoir s first Montmartre address Many other personalities moved through the premises The mansion in the garden at the back is the oldest hotel on Montmartre and one of its first owners was Claude de la Rose a 17th century actor known as Rosimond who bought it in 1680 Claude de la Rose was the actor who replaced Moliere and who like his predecessor died on stage Nearby day and night tourists visit such sights as Place du Tertre and the cabaret du Lapin Agile where the artists had worked and gathered Many renowned artists such as painter and sculptor Edgar Degas and film director Francois Truffaut are buried in the Cimetiere de Montmartre and the Cimetiere Saint Vincent Near the top of the butte Espace Dali showcases surrealist artist Salvador Dali s work Montmartre is an officially designated historic district with limited development allowed in order to maintain its historic character An inclined railway the Funiculaire de Montmartre operated by the RATP ascends the hill from the south while the Montmartre bus circles the hill Downhill to the southwest is the red light district of Pigalle That area is today largely known for a wide variety of stores specializing in instruments for rock music There are also several concert halls also used for rock music The actual Moulin Rouge theatre is also in Pigalle near the Blanche metro station In popular culture EditLiterature Edit The 1950 novel Inspector Maigret and the Strangled Stripper is set in and around Montmartre Roy Walton the English card magician named a card trick Montmartre published in The Complete Walton Volume 1 It features many climaxes throughout the trick including colour changes and card swaps Films Edit The Heart of a Nation released 1943 features a family resident in Montmartre from 1870 to 1939 An American in Paris 1951 with Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron was the winner of the Oscar for the best film of 1951 Many important scenes including the last scenes are set in Montmartre most of the film was shot in Hollywood Moulin Rouge 1952 tells the story of the life and lost loves of painter Henri de Toulouse Lautrec French Cancan 1954 a French musical comedy with Jean Gabin and Maria Felix takes place in Montmartre and tells the story of the Moulin Rouge and the invention of the famous dance The director Jean Renoir was the son of the painter Pierre Auguste Renoir who lived for a time in Montmartre The Great Race 1965 shows Professor Fate in the Hannibal 8 driving down the basilica steps after a wrong turn while racing to the Eiffel tower Celine and Julie Go Boating 1974 opens with a foot chase through Montmartre C etait un rendez vous 1976 a nine minute high speed driving through Paris to the rendezvous point at Montmarte Ronin 1998 Outside of the cafe at the beginning and end Amelie 2001 the tale of a young Parisian woman determined to help the lives of others and find her true love is set in Montmartre and includes a key scene in the gardens below the basilica Moulin Rouge 2001 a musical film set in Montmartre is about the night club and a young writer Ewan McGregor who falls in love with a prominent courtesan Nicole Kidman Remake 2003 Bosnian war film tells the parallel coming of age stories of a father living in Sarajevo during World War II and his son living through the Siege of Sarajevo during the Bosnian War Part of the film was shot in Paris and important scene take place in Montmartre The film stars Francois Berleand and Evelyne Bouix La Mome 2007 La vie en rose tells the life of French singer Edith Piaf who was discovered while singing in Pigalle bordering Montmartre Bastille Day 2016 opens with a pickpocket the main antagonist pickpocketing on the stairs in front of the Sacre Cœur with an accomplice Beauty and the Beast 2017 live action version of a 1991 animated film The film features a scene in which Belle Emma Watson and Beast Dan Stevens are magically transported to the abandoned attic of a windmill atop Montmartre John Wick Chapter 4 2023 has part of its final fight take place in Montmartre This includes a sequence where John Wick Keanu Reeves fights his way up the steps of the Rue Foyatier and concludes with a pistol duel at the courtyard of the Sacre Cœur Basilica Songs Edit In La Boheme a 1965 song by singer songwriter Charles Aznavour a painter recalls his youthful years in a Montmartre that has for him ceased to exist I no longer recognize Either the walls or the streets That had seen my youth At the top of a staircase I look for my studio Of which nothing survives In its new decor Montmartre seems sad And the lilacs are dead The song is a farewell to what according to Aznavour were the last days of Montmartre as a site of bohemian activity The Slade song Far Far Away mentions it in passing in the third verse I ve seen the Paris lights from high upon Montmartre And felt the silence hanging low in No Man s Land Video games Edit In the 2019 mobile game Mario Kart Tour the Montmartre is a notable landmark appearing in the background of the Paris Promenade course Main sights Edit The artist s home and studio Le Bateau Lavoir c 1910 The building at No 13 Rue Ravignan at Place Emile Goudeau was later burned in a fire and rebuilt Wall of Love on Montmartre I love you in 250 languages by calligraphist Federic Baron and artist Claire Kito 2000 The Place du Tertre known for the artists who paint tourists for pleasure and money The Bateau Lavoir site the former home and studio of many well known artists including Pablo Picasso The Dalida house in Rue d Orchampt The Place Dalida The Place Pigalle and the Moulin Rouge in the south The marche Saint Pierre area of the cloth sellers in the south east The working class districts with immigrant communities Barbes Maghreb in the southeast Chateau Rouge in the east The boulevard de Rochechouart metro stations Anvers and Pigalle for its concert halls La Cigale L Elysee Montmartre Le Trianon La Boule Noire inspired by the 19th century cabarets The cimetiere de Montmartre The Rue Lepic with its Les Deux Moulins cafe made famous by the 2001 film Le Fabuleux Destin d Amelie Poulain Erik Satie s house The Place Marcel Ayme site of the R 26 artistic salon and the statue Le passe muraille Le Chat noir and the Lapin Agile cabarets whose clientele at the beginning of the 20th century was mainly French artists The Moulin de la Galette The funiculaire de Montmartre a funicular railway used instead of the steps to ascend the highest part of the hill The Place Emile Goudeau where the Bateau Lavoir was the home and studio of many great painters Place Jean Marais The Espace Dali a museum dedicated to several of the surrealist s masterpieces The Wall of Love in the Jehan Rictus garden square The Martyrium of Saint DenisNotable people EditSee Category People of Montmartre Barbara Pravi French singer born 1993 born in another town but moved when very young 18 See also EditPortal FranceReferences Edit Montmartre Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 2020 03 22 Montmartre Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman Retrieved 21 September 2019 Montmartre Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 21 September 2019 Montmartre Paris last village Facts Paris Digest 2018 Retrieved 2018 09 07 a b c d e f Dictionnaire historique de Paris p 477 Dictionnaire historique de Paris p 476 Young Bailey K Autumn 1978 Archaeology in an Urban Setting Excavations at Saint Pierre de Montmartre Paris 1975 1977 Journal of Field Archaeology 5 3 321 Dictionnaire historique de Paris p 476 Knell Simon J Macleod Suzanne Watson Sheila E R 1967 Museum revolutions how museums change and are changed Abingdon on Thames England Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 44467 5 Sarmant Thierry Histoire de Paris p 196 Milza Pierre L annee terrible La Commune mars juin 1871 Dictionnaire historique de Paris p 478 Dictionnaire historique de Paris 2013 La Pochotheque ISBN 978 2 253 13140 3 Dictionnaire historique de Paris pp 476 480 See William A Shack s Harlem in Montmartre University of California Press 2001 ISBN 0520225376 Django Reinhardt Swing De Paris 6 Oct 2012 Exhibit La Cite de la musique Paris Information on the Clos Montmartre by Syndicat d Initiative retrieved 2008 09 26 Barbara Pravi Genius Retrieved 2022 11 02 Bibliography EditBrigstocke Julian The Life of the City Space Humour and the Experience of Truth in Fin de siecle Montmartre Ashgate 2014 xv 230pp online review Cate Phillip Dennis and Mary Shaw The Spirit of Montmartre Cabarets Humor and the Avant Garde 1875 1905 Rutgers University Press 1996 Weisberg Gabriel ed Montmartre and the Making of Mass Culture Rutgers U Press 2001 In French Edit Sarmant Thierry 2012 Histoire de Paris Politique urbanisme civilisation Editions Jean Paul Gisserot ISBN 978 2 755 803303 Dictionnaire Historique de Paris Le Livre de Poche 2013 ISBN 978 2 253 13140 3 Vie quotidienne a Montmartre au temps de Picasso 1900 1910 Daily Life on Montmartre in the Times of Picasso was written by Jean Paul Crespelle an author historian who specialized in the artistic life of Montmartre and Montparnasse External links Edit Media related to Montmartre at Wikimedia Commons Coordinates 48 53 13 N 02 20 28 E 48 88694 N 2 34111 E 48 88694 2 34111 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Montmartre amp oldid 1151191972, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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