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  2. Leboncoin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leboncoin

    At the beginning of 2017, Leboncoin totaled, according to Le Figaro Magazine, a monthly audience of 28 million unique visitors. It is the fourth most visited site in France after Google, Facebook and YouTube. On February 7, 2021, the site recorded 20.4 million visits during the day. [10]

  3. Le Particulier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Particulier

    The group also publishes the daily newspaper Le Figaro and the magazines Le Figaro Magazine and Madame Figaro Magazine. [3] [4] The publisher of Le Particulier is Le Particulier Editions SA, [5] which was also acquired by the Figaro Group on 18 May 2009. [6] The former publisher of the magazine was the Group Express-Expansion. [7]

  4. List of hôtels particuliers in Paris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hôtels...

    Palais de la Légion d'Honneur, also known as the Hôtel de Salm, 64 rue de Lille, Paris.. In French contexts, an hôtel particulier is a townhouse of a grand sort. Whereas an ordinary maison (house) was built as part of a row, sharing party walls with the houses on either side and directly fronting on a street, an hôtel particulier was often free-standing, and by the 18th century it would ...

  5. Hôtel particulier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hôtel_particulier

    Monographs have been published on some outstanding Parisian hôtels particuliers.; The classic photographic survey, now a rare book found only in large art libraries, is the series Les Vieux Hotels de Paris by J. Vacquer, published in the 1910s and 1920s, which takes Paris quarter by quarter and which illustrates many hôtels particuliers that were demolished during the 20th century.

  6. Rue Bonaparte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rue_Bonaparte

    The Rue Bonaparte (French pronunciation: [ʁy bɔnapaʁt]) is a street in the 6th arrondissement of Paris.It spans the Quai Voltaire/Quai Malaquais to the Jardin du Luxembourg, crossing the Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the Place Saint-Sulpice and has housed many of France's most famous names and institutions as well as other well-known figures from abroad.

  7. Bazar de la Charité - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bazar_de_la_Charité

    The Duchess of Alençon, née Duchess Sophie in Bavaria, photograph taken in 1895. The Bazar de la Charité was an annual charity event orchestrated by the French Catholic aristocracy in Paris beginning in 1885, when it was first organised by Englishman Henry Blount, the son of banker Sir Edward Blount, a financier of railway enterprises in France.

  8. Charvet Place Vendôme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charvet_Place_Vendôme

    The store is located in one of the hôtels particuliers of Place Vendôme, Number 28. This building has a three-story Jules Hardouin Mansart facade, behind which Charvet occupies seven floors, [176] each owner on the Place having built to his own needs. This is the only store directly operated by Charvet. [177]

  9. BnF Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BnF_Museum

    The cabinet, in the sense of a small private room for the conservation and display of intimate works of art and for private conversations, rather than a piece of furniture, took a stable shape under Henry IV, who nominated the connoisseur Rascas de Bagarris garde particulier des médailles et antiques du roi, the "particular guardian of the ...