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  2. Paris under Napoleon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_under_Napoleon

    The American inventor, Robert Fulton, who was in Paris to try to sell his inventions, the steamboat, a submarine and a torpedo, to Napoleon, bought the patent in 1799 from the inventor of the panorama, the English artist Robert Barker, and opened the first panorama in Paris in July 1799; it was a Vue de Paris by the painters Constant Bourgeois ...

  3. Campaign in north-east France (1814) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campaign_in_north-east...

    When Napoleon proposed the army march on Paris, his Marshals decided to unanimously overrule Napoleon in order to save the city from further destruction. As a result, the victorious Coalition negotiated the Treaty of Paris, under which Napoleon was exiled to the island of Elba and the borders of France were returned to where they had been in 1792.

  4. Paris during the Bourbon Restoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_during_the_Bourbon...

    Napoleon had begun the construction of a new sewer system for Paris in 1805, under the direction of Emmanuel Bruneseau, named Inspector of Sewers. He built a network of 26 kilometers of tunnels, with eighty-six separate lines under the streets.

  5. Anna's Thinking Cap: Reformation wars, Cardinal Richelieu ...

    www.aol.com/annas-thinking-cap-reformation-wars...

    Aug. 12, 2024, marks the 400th anniversary of Cardinal Richelieu assuming the post of the First Minister of France. Born in Paris in 1585, by 1608, the 21-year-old Armand Jean du Plessis became a ...

  6. Paris sewers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_sewers

    Sewers under the city in 2005. The sewers of Paris date back to the year 1370 when the first underground system was constructed under Rue Montmartre.Consecutive French governments enlarged the system to cover the city's population, including expansions under Louis XIV and Napoleon III, and modernisation programs in the 1990s under Mayor Jacques Chirac.

  7. Paris in the Belle Époque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_in_the_Belle_Époque

    The industry of mass tourism and large luxury hotels had arrived in Paris under Napoleon III, driven by new railroads and the huge crowds that had come for the first international expositions. The expositions and the crowds grew even larger during the Belle Époque ; twenty-three million visitors came to Paris for the 1889 exposition , and the ...

  8. Holding the world premiere of Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon” in Paris was a no-brainer for Sony’s motion picture group chairman and CEO Tom Rothman, due to the film’s French DNA and its ...

  9. Paris during the Second Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_during_the_Second_Empire

    The new boulevards and parks built by Haussmann during the Second Empire. In 1853, Napoleon III assigned his new prefect of the Seine department, Georges-Eugène Haussmann, the task of bringing more water, air, and light into the city center, widening the streets to make traffic circulation easier, and making it the most beautiful city in Europe.