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Batignolles Cemetery

 
Wikipedia: Batignolles Cemetery
 

The Batignolles Cemetery (French: Cimetière des Batignolles) is a cemetery in Paris, located in the Épinettes district, in the northeastern part of the 17th arrondissement.

Extending over nearly eleven hectares, slightly larger than the Montmartre Cemetery, the Batignolles cemetery contains approximately fifteen thousand graves, and it is the fourth cemetery of Paris, in terms of the number of graves. In terms of land area, only the Père Lachaise Cemetery and the Montparnasse Cemetery are larger.[1] Within its perimeter, there are approximately nine hundred mature trees, mostly chestnuts and maples.

It opened on 22 August 1833, and it is now the home for the earthly remains of André Breton, Gaston Calmette, Blaise Cendrars, Benjamin Péret, and Paul Verlaine, among others.[1]

Metro stations

The Batignolles Cemetery is:

Paris Métro
located near the metro stationsPorte de ClichyMairie de Clichy or Porte de Saint-Ouen.

It is served by line 13.

The RER C-line commuter train can be accessed at the Porte de Clichy.

References

Coordinates: 48°53′52″N 2°19′0″E / 48.89778°N 2.31667°E / 48.89778; 2.31667


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Batignolles Cemetery" Read more