Le couvent des Annonciades de Popincourt ou des Annonciades du Saint-Esprit était un couvent de l’Ordre de l'Annonciade établi rue Popincourt de 1636 à 1782.
Location
18 m
Saint-Ambroise is a Roman Catholic parish church located in the 11th arrondissement in eastern Paris. It is dedicated to St. Ambrose, an ancient Roman statesman and theologian who served as Bishop of Milan.
The church of Saint-Ambroise gave the neighborhood its name, the quartier Saint-Ambroise. The current structure replaced an earlier church of Saint-Ambroise, built in 1659, which was demolished to make room for the new boulevards built by Napoleon III. The church is 87 metres in length, and its towers are 68 metres high. It is served by the Metro station Saint-Ambroise.
The church was inscribed as a French national historic monument on 2 June, 1978.
90 m
Saint-Ambroise is a station on Line 9 of the Paris Métro, located in the 11th arrondissement of Paris. It is under Boulevard Voltaire.
217 m
Communauté Juive Libérale d'Île-de-France is a Reform Jewish congregation with a synagogue, located in a Maison du judaïsme at 11 rue Moufle, in the XIe Arrondissement of Paris, France. The community is led by Rabbi Pauline Bebe, the first woman rabbi in France. The community is affiliated with the World Union for Progressive Judaism.
269 m
Richard-Lenoir is a station on Line 5 of the Paris Métro, located in the 11th arrondissement.
280 m
The Boulevard Richard-Lenoir, running from the Bastille to the Avenue de la République, is one of the wide tree-lined boulevards driven through Paris by Baron Haussmann during the Second French Empire of Napoleon III.
The boulevard is named after François Richard-Lenoir and Joseph Lenoir-Dufresne, business-partner industrialists who brought the cotton industry to Paris and northern France in the 18th and early 19th centuries. It is the site of a weekly art market and of a bi-weekly fruit and vegetable market that is one of the largest in Paris.