
In 1362, the Knights Templars’ main income came from 5 mills that it owned in Paris. Between Paris’ ramparts and the walls of the Templars’ house were meadows and marshlands that were sold in 1608 for 600 French livres so that houses could be built. The new streets that were soon to take shape were named Rue d'Orléans, Rue de Berry and Rue d'Angoumois.
As for the other section of the land which was named Marais du Temple, situated in the Courtille district, beyond the ramparts and ending in the Chemin de Ménilmontant, in 1778 a concession, with an emphyteutic 99 year lease, was proposed to all those wanting to build there for an annual tax of twenty French sols per toise (100 sq ft). This concession, seen as an opportunity to increase its income, was eagerly approved by the Great Council of the Order of Malta.
The Grand-Prior reached an agreement with the city in order to plot a square and streets on the land in question. The king approved the plan in letters dated 13 October 1781. The square was named Place d'Angoulême after the Grand-Prior of the time, the Duke of Angoulême, and the streets were called Rue d'Angoulême, Rue de Crussol, Rue de Malte, Rue du Grand-Prieuré and Rue de la Tour. In this district known as Oberkampf or Marais, in the first part of the Rue de Malte, housed at the end of a deep paved courtyard, decorated with bamboo, wisely domesticated in tin pots, are an independent, renovated building and communal areas, all in a very good state of repair.

Idéalement placé pour les collectionneurs ou amateurs d’art, au cœur des galeries de la rive droite et à proximité des enseignes de luxe du Faubourg Saint Honoré.En bas de la rue de Miromesnil anciennement rue Guyot qui va de la place Beauvau au boulevard de Courcelles et qui hébergea en leur temps des hôtes illustres (la romancière Colette, le peintre Edouard Vuillard ou encore François- René de Chateaubriand…).

Situé dans le 51ème quartier administratif de Paris, entre la Butte aux Cailles et la vallée de la Bièvre, non loin de l’auberge blanche ayant appartenue au père de l’historien Victor Duruy.
Dans une ancienne fermette ou maison maraichère caractéristique du quartier sur 3 niveaux avec une partie du grenier aménagée.

A proximité de la Villa Eiffel, au coeur d’un quartier très résidentiel, réputé pour ses nombreux musées, mais aussi pour son marché, fameux.

In the heart of Paris’ 4th arrondissement, on the “Ile Notre Dame” which, in the 17th century, was joined to the “Ile aux vaches”, inhabited and covered with grasslands; it is currently known as Ile Saint Louis.
Set between the Quai de Bourbon and the Quai d’Orléans on the west side of the island, in a 6 storey building dating from after the Haussmannian era.