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Along sections of Wood, Washington, Poplar, Market, Fentress and West Blythe Streets, Paris, Henry County, Tennessee Coordinates 36°18′10″N 88°19′33″W / 36.30278°N 88.32583°W / 36.30278; -88
Location of Henry County in Tennessee. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Henry County, Tennessee.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Henry County, Tennessee, United States.
Paris is located just south of the center of Henry County at (36.301229, -88.313815 U.S. Route 641 passes through the city center as Market Street, leading north 21 miles (34 km) to Murray, Kentucky, and southeast 22 miles (35 km) to Camden.
St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church (1852), at 190 Adams Ave. North Memphis Savings Bank (1901), at 110 Adams Ave. Shelby County Courthouse (1909), at 160 Adams Ave., which was designed by architects H. D. Hale and James Gamble Rogers , who both were students of the Ecole de Beaux Arts in Paris.
This is a list of cities and towns founded by the Romans.. It lists cities established and built by the ancient Romans to have begun as a colony, often for the settlement of citizens or veterans of the legions.
Diagram of a typical Roman domus, with a taberna on each side of the entrance. A taberna (pl.: tabernae) was a type of shop or stall in Ancient Rome.Originally meaning a single-room shop for the sale of goods and services, tabernae were often incorporated into domestic dwellings on the ground level flanking the fauces, the main entrance to a home, but with one side open to the street.
The architects proposed a covered shopping arcade that would preserve the style of an ancient Roman street using contemporary materials. Their plan was based on the hope that archeologists would find remains of the southern end of the cardo , an extension of the north–south Roman thoroughfare built during the Byzantine era (324–638).
The Roman Market Economy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2013. Tomber, R. Indo-Roman Trade: From Pots to Pepper. London: Duckworth, 2008. Vrba, Eric Michael. Ancient German Identity In the Shadow of the Roman Empire: The Impact of Roman Trade and Contact Along the Middle Danube Frontier, 10 BC - AD 166. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2008.