fbpx
Wikipedia

Montparnasse

Montparnasse (French: [mɔ̃paʁnas] ) is an area in the south of Paris, France, on the left bank of the river Seine, centred at the crossroads of the Boulevard du Montparnasse and the Rue de Rennes, between the Rue de Rennes and boulevard Raspail. It is split between the 6th, 14th, and 15th arrondissements of the city. Montparnasse has been part of Paris since 1669.[citation needed]

Montparnasse cemetery and Tour Montparnasse

The area also gives its name to:

Students in the 17th century who came to recite poetry in the hilly neighbourhood nicknamed it after "Mount Parnassus", home to the nine Muses of arts and sciences in Greek mythology. The hill was levelled to construct the Boulevard Montparnasse in the 18th century. During the French Revolution many dance halls and cabarets opened their doors, becoming gathering points for artists. The area is also known for cafés and bars, such as the Breton restaurants specialising in crêpes (thin pancakes) located a few blocks from the Gare Montparnasse.[1] The Pasteur Institute is located in the area. Beneath the ground are tunnels of the Catacombs of Paris.

Artistic hub edit

 
Le Dôme Café

In the 18th century, students recited poems at the foot of an artificial hillock of rock rubble from the Catacombs of Paris. Ironically, they decided to baptise this mound Mount Parnassus, named after the Mount Parnassus celebrated in Ancient Greek literature. In the early 20th century, many Bretons who were driven out of their region by poverty arrived by train at Gare Montparnasse, in the heart of the Montparnasse district, and settled nearby.[2] Montparnasse became famous in the Roaring Twenties, referred to as les Années Folles (the Crazy Years), and the 1930s as the heart of intellectual and artistic life in Paris. From 1910 to the start of World War II, Paris' artistic circles migrated to Montparnasse as the alternative to the Montmartre district which had been the intellectual breeding ground for the previous generation of artists. The Paris of Charles Baudelaire, Robert de Montesquiou, Zola, Manet, France, Degas, Fauré typically indulged in the Bohemianism cultural refinements of Dandyism.

The cultural scene during the late-1920s for expatriates in Montparnasse and the 6th arrondissement is described in John Glassco's 1970 book Memoirs of Montparnasse. Virtually penniless painters, sculptors, writers, poets and composers came from around the world to thrive in the creative atmosphere of Montparnasse and for the cheap rent at artist communes, such as La Ruche. Living without running water, in damp, unheated Ateliers, many sold their works for a few Francs just to buy food. Jean Cocteau once said that poverty was a luxury in Montparnasse. First promoted by art dealers such as Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, today works by those artists sell for millions of euros.

 
The 1895 Montparnasse derailment at Gare Montparnasse
 
Modigliani, Picasso and Salmon,
at La Rotonde, by Cocteau, 1916.

In post-World War I Paris, Montparnasse was a euphoric meeting place for the artistic world. Fernand Léger wrote of that period: "man...relaxes and recaptures his taste for life, his frenzy to dance, to spend money...an explosion of life-force fills the world."[3] They came to Montparnasse from all over the globe - from Europe, including Russia, Hungary and Ukraine, from the United States, Canada, Mexico, Central and South America, and from as far away as Japan. Manuel Ortiz de Zárate, Camilo Mori and others made their way from Chile where the profound innovations in art spawned the formation of the Grupo Montparnasse in Santiago. A few of the other artists who gathered in Montparnasse were Jacob Macznik,[4][5] Pablo Picasso, Guillaume Apollinaire,Ossip Zadkine, Julio Gonzalez, Moise Kisling, Jean Cocteau, Erik Satie, Marios Varvoglis, Marc Chagall, Nina Hamnett, Jean Rhys, Fernand Léger, Jacques Lipchitz, Max Jacob, Blaise Cendrars, Chaïm Soutine, James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Yitzhak Frenkel Frenel, Michel Kikoine, Pinchus Kremegne, Amedeo Modigliani, Ford Madox Ford, Toño Salazar, Ezra Pound, Max Ernst, Marcel Duchamp, Suzanne Duchamp-Crotti, Henri Rousseau, Constantin Brâncuși, Eva Kotchever, Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore, Paul Fort, Juan Gris, Diego Rivera, Federico Cantú, Angel Zarraga, Marevna, Tsuguharu Foujita, Marie Vassilieff, Léon-Paul Fargue, Alberto Giacometti, René Iché, André Breton, Alfonso Reyes, Pascin, Nils Dardel, Salvador Dalí, Henry Miller, Samuel Beckett, Emil Cioran, Reginald Gray, Endre Ady, Joan Miró, Hilaire Hiler and, in his declining years, Edgar Degas.

 
La Rotonde at night 2007

Montparnasse was a community where creativity was embraced with all its oddities, each new arrival welcomed unreservedly by its existing members. When Tsuguharu Foujita arrived from Japan in 1913 not knowing a soul, he met Chaïm Soutine, Amedeo Modigliani, Jules Pascin and Fernand Léger virtually the same night and within a week became friends with Juan Gris, Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse. In 1914, when the English painter Nina Hamnett arrived in Montparnasse, on her first evening the smiling man at the next table at Café de la Rotonde graciously introduced himself as "Modigliani, painter and Jew". They became good friends and Hamnett later recounting how she once borrowed a jersey and corduroy trousers from Modigliani, then went to La Rotonde and danced in the street all night.

Between 1921 and 1924, the number of Americans in Paris swelled from 6,000 to 30,000. While most of the artistic community gathered here were struggling to eke out an existence, well-heeled American socialites such as Peggy Guggenheim, and Edith Wharton from New York City, Harry Crosby from Boston and Beatrice Wood from San Francisco were caught in the fever of creativity. Robert McAlmon, and Maria and Eugene Jolas came to Paris and published their literary magazine Transition. Harry Crosby and his wife Caresse would establish the Black Sun Press in Paris in 1927, publishing works by such future luminaries as D. H. Lawrence, Archibald MacLeish, James Joyce, Kay Boyle, Hart Crane, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, William Faulkner, Dorothy Parker and others. As well, Bill Bird published through his Three Mountains Press until British heiress Nancy Cunard took it over.

 
Cafés rented tables to poor artists for hours at a stretch. Several, including La Closerie des Lilas, remain in business today.

The cafés, bistros and bars of Montparnasse were a meeting place where cultural ideas and connections were hatched and mulled over. The cafés at the centre of Montparnasse's night-life were in the Carrefour Vavin, now renamed Place Pablo-Picasso.

In Montparnasse's heyday (from 1910 to 1920), the cafés Le Dôme, Closerie des Lilas, La Rotonde, Le Select, and La Coupole—all of which are still in business—were the places where starving artists could occupy a table all evening for a few centimes. If they fell asleep, the waiters were instructed not to wake them. Arguments were common, some fueled by intellect, others by alcohol, and if there were fights (and there often were) the police were never summoned. If you could not pay your bill, people such as La Rotonde's proprietor, Victor Libion, would often accept a drawing, holding it until the artist could pay. As such, there were times when the café's walls were littered with a collection of artworks.

There were many areas where the artists congregated, one of them being near Le Dôme at no. 10 rue Delambre called the Dingo Bar. It was the hang-out of artists and ex-patriate Americans and the place where Canadian writer Morley Callaghan, who came with his friend Ernest Hemingway, both still unpublished writers, met the already-established writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. When Man Ray's friend and Dadaist, Marcel Duchamp, left for New York City, Man Ray set up his first studio at l'Hôtel des Ecoles at no. 15 rue Delambre. This is where his career as a photographer began, and where James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, Kiki of Montparnasse, Jean Cocteau and the others filed in and posed in black and white.

The rue de la Gaité in Montparnasse was the site of many of the great music-hall theatres, in particular the famous "Bobino".

 
Great artists performed at the Bobino Nightclub.

On their stages, using then-popular single name pseudonyms or one birth name only, Damia, Kiki, Mayol and Georgius, sang and performed to packed houses. And here too, Les Six was formed, creating music based on the ideas of Erik Satie and Jean Cocteau.

The poet Max Jacob said he came to Montparnasse to "sin disgracefully", but Marc Chagall summed it up differently when he explained why he had gone to Montparnasse: "I aspired to see with my own eyes what I had heard of from so far away: this revolution of the eye, this rotation of colours, which spontaneously and astutely merge with one another in a flow of conceived lines. That could not be seen in my town. The sun of Art then shone only on Paris."

While the area attracted people who came to live and work in the creative, bohemian environment, it also became home for political exiles such as Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Porfirio Diaz, and Simon Petlyura. But, World War II forced the dispersal of the artistic society, and after the war Montparnasse never regained its splendour. Wealthy socialites like Peggy Guggenheim, an art collector who married artist Max Ernst, lived in the Hôtel Lutetia and frequented the artist studios of Montparnasse, acquiring pieces that would come to be recognized as masterpieces now in the Peggy Guggenheim Museum in Venice, Italy.

The Musée du Montparnasse opened in 1998 at 21 Avenue du Maine and closed in 2015. Although operating with a tiny city grant, the museum was a non-profit operation. The Gallery of Montparnasse was one of the first to introduce abstract expressionism in France in the 1940s, and still holds contemporary art exhibitions today.

Economy edit

 
The different quarter of the 14th arrondissement, including Montparnasse
 
SNCF head office

SNCF, the French rail company, has its head office in Montparnasse near the 14th arrondissement.[6][7]

Prior to the completion of the current Air France head office in Tremblay-en-France in December 1995,[8][9] Air France had its headquarters in a tower located next to the Gare Montparnasse railway station in Montparnasse and in the 15th arrondissement; Air France had its headquarters in the tower for about 30 years.[10][11][12]

Education edit

The Vandamme Library (Bibliothèque Vandamme) is located in the neighbourhood.[13][14]

References edit

  1. ^ Amanda Mehtala & Arthini Pulenthiran (2018). "Paris Neighborhood Guide: Montparnasse". Theatre in Paris. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Montparnasse". Paris Digest. 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  3. ^ Woodhead, Lindy, "War Paint: Madame Rubenstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden, Their Lives, Their Times, Their Rivalry," Wiley, 2004, p. 128
  4. ^ Montparnasse Déporté: Artisti Europei de Parigi al Lager; published by Elede, 2007, under the auspices of the Musée du Montparnasse, the City of Turin, and the Region of Piemonte (Italy)
  5. ^ Undzere Farpainikte Kinstler, Hersh Fenster, Imprimerie Abècé, Paris, 1951
  6. ^ "Legal information 29 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine." SNCF. Retrieved 26 October 2009.
  7. ^ "Le siège haut perché de la SNCF à Montparnasse[permanent dead link]." Les Echos. 20 May 1999. Page 54. Retrieved 1 May 2010. "Pari tenu : réceptionné le 19 mars par Bouygues Immobilier et livré à son occupant dix jours plus tard, le nouveau siège de la SNCF est sorti de la gangue du grand ensemble de la gare Montparnasse, dans le 14e arrondissement de Paris, en quinze mois d'un chantier intense qui a mobilisé sur place jusqu'à 650 personnes. Quelque 800 postes de travail sont concernés sur les 2.500 qui gravitaient hier autour du siège historique de Saint-Lazare (9e arrondissement), consacrant la partition entre une direction générale resserrée et des services centraux pléthoriques."
  8. ^ "AIR FRANCE HEAD QUARTERS – ROISSYPOLE 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine." Groupement d'Etudes et de Méthodes d'Ordonnancement (GEMO). Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  9. ^ "Roissy Charles-de-Gaulle 13 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine." Tremblay-en-France. Retrieved 20 September 2009.
  10. ^ Salpukas, Agis (27 December 1992). "Air France's Big Challenge". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2009.
  11. ^ World Airline Directory. Flight International. 20 March 1975. "466.
  12. ^ Mlekuz, Nathalie. "Air France vole vers ses avions, destination Roissy 28 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine". Le Monde. 2 April 1997. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
  13. ^ "Bibliothèque Vandamme[permanent dead link]." City of Paris. Retrieved 22 February 2010.
  14. ^ "Des livres à domicile pour les seniors." Le Parisien. 11 August 2009. Retrieved 22 February 2010. "la bibliothèque Vandamme de l'avenue du Maine (Montparnasse, XIV e)."

Further reading edit

  • Billy Kluver, Julie Martin. Kiki's Paris: Artists and Lovers 1900–1930. The definitive illustrated account of the golden age of Montparnasse.
  • Shari Benstock, Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900–1940, University of Texas at Austin, 1986
  • Being Geniuses Together, 1920–1930 by Robert McAlmon, Kay Boyle (1968)

External links edit

48°50′37.10″N 2°19′25.72″E / 48.8436389°N 2.3238111°E / 48.8436389; 2.3238111

montparnasse, french, paʁnas, area, south, paris, france, left, bank, river, seine, centred, crossroads, boulevard, rennes, between, rennes, boulevard, raspail, split, between, 14th, 15th, arrondissements, city, been, part, paris, since, 1669, citation, needed. Montparnasse French mɔ paʁnas is an area in the south of Paris France on the left bank of the river Seine centred at the crossroads of the Boulevard du Montparnasse and the Rue de Rennes between the Rue de Rennes and boulevard Raspail It is split between the 6th 14th and 15th arrondissements of the city Montparnasse has been part of Paris since 1669 citation needed Montparnasse cemetery and Tour Montparnasse For the film see Montparnasse film The area also gives its name to Gare Montparnasse trains to Brittany TGV to Rennes Tours Bordeaux Le Mans rebuilt as a modern TGV station The large Montparnasse Bienvenue metro station Cimetiere du Montparnasse the Montparnasse Cemetery where among other celebrities Charles Baudelaire Constantin Brancuși Jean Paul Sartre Simone de Beauvoir Man Ray Samuel Beckett Serge Gainsbourg and Susan Sontag are buried Tour Montparnasse a lone skyscraper Students in the 17th century who came to recite poetry in the hilly neighbourhood nicknamed it after Mount Parnassus home to the nine Muses of arts and sciences in Greek mythology The hill was levelled to construct the Boulevard Montparnasse in the 18th century During the French Revolution many dance halls and cabarets opened their doors becoming gathering points for artists The area is also known for cafes and bars such as the Breton restaurants specialising in crepes thin pancakes located a few blocks from the Gare Montparnasse 1 The Pasteur Institute is located in the area Beneath the ground are tunnels of the Catacombs of Paris Contents 1 Artistic hub 2 Economy 3 Education 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksArtistic hub edit nbsp Le Dome Cafe In the 18th century students recited poems at the foot of an artificial hillock of rock rubble from the Catacombs of Paris Ironically they decided to baptise this mound Mount Parnassus named after the Mount Parnassus celebrated in Ancient Greek literature In the early 20th century many Bretons who were driven out of their region by poverty arrived by train at Gare Montparnasse in the heart of the Montparnasse district and settled nearby 2 Montparnasse became famous in the Roaring Twenties referred to as les Annees Folles the Crazy Years and the 1930s as the heart of intellectual and artistic life in Paris From 1910 to the start of World War II Paris artistic circles migrated to Montparnasse as the alternative to the Montmartre district which had been the intellectual breeding ground for the previous generation of artists The Paris of Charles Baudelaire Robert de Montesquiou Zola Manet France Degas Faure typically indulged in the Bohemianism cultural refinements of Dandyism The cultural scene during the late 1920s for expatriates in Montparnasse and the 6th arrondissement is described in John Glassco s 1970 book Memoirs of Montparnasse Virtually penniless painters sculptors writers poets and composers came from around the world to thrive in the creative atmosphere of Montparnasse and for the cheap rent at artist communes such as La Ruche Living without running water in damp unheated Ateliers many sold their works for a few Francs just to buy food Jean Cocteau once said that poverty was a luxury in Montparnasse First promoted by art dealers such as Daniel Henry Kahnweiler today works by those artists sell for millions of euros nbsp The 1895 Montparnasse derailment at Gare Montparnasse nbsp Modigliani Picasso and Salmon at La Rotonde by Cocteau 1916 In post World War I Paris Montparnasse was a euphoric meeting place for the artistic world Fernand Leger wrote of that period man relaxes and recaptures his taste for life his frenzy to dance to spend money an explosion of life force fills the world 3 They came to Montparnasse from all over the globe from Europe including Russia Hungary and Ukraine from the United States Canada Mexico Central and South America and from as far away as Japan Manuel Ortiz de Zarate Camilo Mori and others made their way from Chile where the profound innovations in art spawned the formation of the Grupo Montparnasse in Santiago A few of the other artists who gathered in Montparnasse were Jacob Macznik 4 5 Pablo Picasso Guillaume Apollinaire Ossip Zadkine Julio Gonzalez Moise Kisling Jean Cocteau Erik Satie Marios Varvoglis Marc Chagall Nina Hamnett Jean Rhys Fernand Leger Jacques Lipchitz Max Jacob Blaise Cendrars Chaim Soutine James Joyce Ernest Hemingway Yitzhak Frenkel Frenel Michel Kikoine Pinchus Kremegne Amedeo Modigliani Ford Madox Ford Tono Salazar Ezra Pound Max Ernst Marcel Duchamp Suzanne Duchamp Crotti Henri Rousseau Constantin Brancuși Eva Kotchever Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore Paul Fort Juan Gris Diego Rivera Federico Cantu Angel Zarraga Marevna Tsuguharu Foujita Marie Vassilieff Leon Paul Fargue Alberto Giacometti Rene Iche Andre Breton Alfonso Reyes Pascin Nils Dardel Salvador Dali Henry Miller Samuel Beckett Emil Cioran Reginald Gray Endre Ady Joan Miro Hilaire Hiler and in his declining years Edgar Degas nbsp La Rotonde at night 2007 Montparnasse was a community where creativity was embraced with all its oddities each new arrival welcomed unreservedly by its existing members When Tsuguharu Foujita arrived from Japan in 1913 not knowing a soul he met Chaim Soutine Amedeo Modigliani Jules Pascin and Fernand Leger virtually the same night and within a week became friends with Juan Gris Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse In 1914 when the English painter Nina Hamnett arrived in Montparnasse on her first evening the smiling man at the next table at Cafe de la Rotonde graciously introduced himself as Modigliani painter and Jew They became good friends and Hamnett later recounting how she once borrowed a jersey and corduroy trousers from Modigliani then went to La Rotonde and danced in the street all night Between 1921 and 1924 the number of Americans in Paris swelled from 6 000 to 30 000 While most of the artistic community gathered here were struggling to eke out an existence well heeled American socialites such as Peggy Guggenheim and Edith Wharton from New York City Harry Crosby from Boston and Beatrice Wood from San Francisco were caught in the fever of creativity Robert McAlmon and Maria and Eugene Jolas came to Paris and published their literary magazine Transition Harry Crosby and his wife Caresse would establish the Black Sun Press in Paris in 1927 publishing works by such future luminaries as D H Lawrence Archibald MacLeish James Joyce Kay Boyle Hart Crane Ernest Hemingway John Dos Passos William Faulkner Dorothy Parker and others As well Bill Bird published through his Three Mountains Press until British heiress Nancy Cunard took it over nbsp Cafes rented tables to poor artists for hours at a stretch Several including La Closerie des Lilas remain in business today The cafes bistros and bars of Montparnasse were a meeting place where cultural ideas and connections were hatched and mulled over The cafes at the centre of Montparnasse s night life were in the Carrefour Vavin now renamed Place Pablo Picasso In Montparnasse s heyday from 1910 to 1920 the cafes Le Dome Closerie des Lilas La Rotonde Le Select and La Coupole all of which are still in business were the places where starving artists could occupy a table all evening for a few centimes If they fell asleep the waiters were instructed not to wake them Arguments were common some fueled by intellect others by alcohol and if there were fights and there often were the police were never summoned If you could not pay your bill people such as La Rotonde s proprietor Victor Libion would often accept a drawing holding it until the artist could pay As such there were times when the cafe s walls were littered with a collection of artworks There were many areas where the artists congregated one of them being near Le Dome at no 10 rue Delambre called the Dingo Bar It was the hang out of artists and ex patriate Americans and the place where Canadian writer Morley Callaghan who came with his friend Ernest Hemingway both still unpublished writers met the already established writer F Scott Fitzgerald When Man Ray s friend and Dadaist Marcel Duchamp left for New York City Man Ray set up his first studio at l Hotel des Ecoles at no 15 rue Delambre This is where his career as a photographer began and where James Joyce Gertrude Stein Kiki of Montparnasse Jean Cocteau and the others filed in and posed in black and white The rue de la Gaite in Montparnasse was the site of many of the great music hall theatres in particular the famous Bobino nbsp Great artists performed at the Bobino Nightclub On their stages using then popular single name pseudonyms or one birth name only Damia Kiki Mayol and Georgius sang and performed to packed houses And here too Les Six was formed creating music based on the ideas of Erik Satie and Jean Cocteau The poet Max Jacob said he came to Montparnasse to sin disgracefully but Marc Chagall summed it up differently when he explained why he had gone to Montparnasse I aspired to see with my own eyes what I had heard of from so far away this revolution of the eye this rotation of colours which spontaneously and astutely merge with one another in a flow of conceived lines That could not be seen in my town The sun of Art then shone only on Paris While the area attracted people who came to live and work in the creative bohemian environment it also became home for political exiles such as Vladimir Lenin Leon Trotsky Porfirio Diaz and Simon Petlyura But World War II forced the dispersal of the artistic society and after the war Montparnasse never regained its splendour Wealthy socialites like Peggy Guggenheim an art collector who married artist Max Ernst lived in the Hotel Lutetia and frequented the artist studios of Montparnasse acquiring pieces that would come to be recognized as masterpieces now in the Peggy Guggenheim Museum in Venice Italy The Musee du Montparnasse opened in 1998 at 21 Avenue du Maine and closed in 2015 Although operating with a tiny city grant the museum was a non profit operation The Gallery of Montparnasse was one of the first to introduce abstract expressionism in France in the 1940s and still holds contemporary art exhibitions today Economy edit nbsp The different quarter of the 14th arrondissement including Montparnasse nbsp SNCF head office SNCF the French rail company has its head office in Montparnasse near the 14th arrondissement 6 7 Prior to the completion of the current Air France head office in Tremblay en France in December 1995 8 9 Air France had its headquarters in a tower located next to the Gare Montparnasse railway station in Montparnasse and in the 15th arrondissement Air France had its headquarters in the tower for about 30 years 10 11 12 Education editThe Vandamme Library Bibliotheque Vandamme is located in the neighbourhood 13 14 Portal nbsp FranceReferences edit Amanda Mehtala amp Arthini Pulenthiran 2018 Paris Neighborhood Guide Montparnasse Theatre in Paris Retrieved 18 February 2020 Montparnasse Paris Digest 2018 Retrieved 13 August 2018 Woodhead Lindy War Paint Madame Rubenstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden Their Lives Their Times Their Rivalry Wiley 2004 p 128 Montparnasse Deporte Artisti Europei de Parigi al Lager published by Elede 2007 under the auspices of the Musee du Montparnasse the City of Turin and the Region of Piemonte Italy Undzere Farpainikte Kinstler Hersh Fenster Imprimerie Abece Paris 1951 Legal information Archived 29 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine SNCF Retrieved 26 October 2009 Le siege haut perche de la SNCF a Montparnasse permanent dead link Les Echos 20 May 1999 Page 54 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Pari tenu receptionne le 19 mars par Bouygues Immobilier et livre a son occupant dix jours plus tard le nouveau siege de la SNCF est sorti de la gangue du grand ensemble de la gare Montparnasse dans le 14e arrondissement de Paris en quinze mois d un chantier intense qui a mobilise sur place jusqu a 650 personnes Quelque 800 postes de travail sont concernes sur les 2 500 qui gravitaient hier autour du siege historique de Saint Lazare 9e arrondissement consacrant la partition entre une direction generale resserree et des services centraux plethoriques AIR FRANCE HEAD QUARTERS ROISSYPOLE Archived 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Groupement d Etudes et de Methodes d Ordonnancement GEMO Retrieved 20 September 2009 Roissy Charles de Gaulle Archived 13 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine Tremblay en France Retrieved 20 September 2009 Salpukas Agis 27 December 1992 Air France s Big Challenge The New York Times Retrieved 31 May 2009 World Airline Directory Flight International 20 March 1975 466 Mlekuz Nathalie Air France vole vers ses avions destination Roissy Archived 28 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 2 April 1997 Retrieved 22 September 2009 Bibliotheque Vandamme permanent dead link City of Paris Retrieved 22 February 2010 Des livres a domicile pour les seniors Le Parisien 11 August 2009 Retrieved 22 February 2010 la bibliotheque Vandamme de l avenue du Maine Montparnasse XIV e Further reading editBilly Kluver Julie Martin Kiki s Paris Artists and Lovers 1900 1930 The definitive illustrated account of the golden age of Montparnasse Shari Benstock Women of the Left Bank Paris 1900 1940 University of Texas at Austin 1986 Being Geniuses Together 1920 1930 by Robert McAlmon Kay Boyle 1968 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Montparnasse 48 50 37 10 N 2 19 25 72 E 48 8436389 N 2 3238111 E 48 8436389 2 3238111 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Montparnasse amp oldid 1211033409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.