Paris . hou family. Of later monuments,those of Andrd Duchesne—pfere de Ihistoire de France,the engraver Robert Nanteuil, and the poet Houdart de laMotte, were remarkable. On the right and left of the altarwere the tombs of the Prince de Conti, by Nicolas Coustou(now at Versailles), and of his mother, by Girardon(destroyed in the Revolution). The little Collfege dAutun,on the right of the street, was founded for fifteen scholars (in1327) by Cardinal Pierre Bertrand, Bishop of Autun ; it waspulled down in the Revolution. At the same time perishedthe College de Boissi, behind the church, which w
Paris . hou family. Of later monuments,those of Andrd Duchesne—pfere de Ihistoire de France,the engraver Robert Nanteuil, and the poet Houdart de laMotte, were remarkable. On the right and left of the altarwere the tombs of the Prince de Conti, by Nicolas Coustou(now at Versailles), and of his mother, by Girardon(destroyed in the Revolution). The little Collfege dAutun,on the right of the street, was founded for fifteen scholars (in1327) by Cardinal Pierre Bertrand, Bishop of Autun ; it waspulled down in the Revolution. At the same time perishedthe College de Boissi, behind the church, which was founded(in 1358) by Etienne Vid^, of Boissi le Sec. From the Place S. Andrd des Arts, the Rue HautefeuiUeruns south, and is perhaps in its domestic architecture the c c 386 PARIS most interesting and the best worth preserving of allParisian streets. The name tfautefeuille comes from afortress—altuvi folium, the lofty dwelling—which existedclose to this in very early times. No. 5 has an admirable. H&TKL DE FECAMP. round tourelle belonging to the Hdtel de Fecamp. No. 9is a very curious house with turrets. No. 21 has a well-proportioned octangular tourelle. The Rue Hautefeuillecrosses the Rue Serjiente, in which, to the east, stood theCollege de Tours, which was swallowed up in the College COLLEGE DE MLGNON 387 Louis le Grand. It was founded (in 1375) by Etienne deBourgueil, Archbishop of Tours. To the west, a sculpturedglory on a building, at the angle of the Rue Mignon, is astill existing relic (the end of the chapel) of the College de
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidcu3192409881, bookyear1887