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Le Bon Marché

 
 
Paris: Where to Shop: Department Stores: Bon Marché

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24 Rue du Sèvres, 7th, M° Sèvres-Babylone, ☎ 01 44 39 80 00, www.lebonmarche.fr. Open Monday through Saturday, 9:30am to 7pm (open later on Thursday and Saturday; closed Sunday). This elegant department store near St-Germain-des-Prés is the most typically Parisian of all the Grands Magasins, best known for its beauty and fashion departments. There are regular cultural expositions on the second floor. Just behind (connected by a skyway) is the Grand Epicerie (☎ 01 44 39 81 00, www.lagrandeepicerie.fr, or click on the link on the Bon Marché site; both have English versions), a gourmet supermarket open Monday through Saturday, 8:30am to 9pm.

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Paris department store. It was founded as a small shop in the early 19th century, and by c. 1865 it had become the world's first true department store. Its 1876 building was designed by Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel (1832 – 1923). It is unrelated to the Bon Marché chain of department stores in the northwestern U.S.

For more information on Bon Marché, visit Britannica.com.

Wikipedia: Le Bon Marché
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For the former chain of American department stores, see The Bon Marché. bonmarché is also the name of a British clothing retail chain owned by The Peacock Group plc.
Le Bon Marché
Interior

Le Bon Marché ("the good market", or "the good deal" in French; French pronunciation: [lə bɔ̃ maʁʃe]) is the name of one of the most famous department stores in Paris, France. It is sometimes regarded as the first department store in the world. Although this depends on what is meant by 'department store', it may have had the first specially-designed building for a store in Paris. The founder was Aristide Boucicaut.

Contents

History

The store was founded as a small shop in Paris during 1838, and was a fixed-price department store from about 1850. It was a successful business, and a new building was constructed for the store by Louis Auguste Boileau in 1867. Louis Charles Boileau, his son, continued the store in the 1870s, consulting the firm of Gustave Eiffel for parts of its structure. Louis Hippolyte Boileau, the grandson of Louis Auguste, worked on an extension to the store in the 1920s.

Trivia

After adopting the emblem in 1914, Pierre de Coubertin ordered to make the Olympic flag in this store for release in the 1916 Summer Olympics. It debuted in the 1920 Summer Olympics.[1]

External links

Recommended reading

The Bon Marché. Bourgeois Culture and the Department Store, 1869-1920, by Michael B. Miller - a history of the store; and Émile Zola's novel The Ladies' Paradise, based on the commercial life in Paris of the 1800s and on the family behind the successful Bon Marche department store, Aristide and Marguerite Boucicaut.

Au Bonheur des Dames, Émile Zola, 1883. The eleventh novel in Zola's Rougon-Macquart series. Documents the birth of modern retailing, changes in city planning and architecture, considers feminism, deconstructs desire in the marketplace and tells in a Cinderella format the life of the Boucicauts who, in the novel, appear as Octave Mouret and Denise Baudu. One of Zola's more positive novels about the changes in society during the Second Empire.

Bernard Marrey, Les Grands Magasins des origines a 1939 (Paris: Picard, 1979)

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Enciclopedia Mundial del Deporte tomo 1 UTEHA Madrid 1981

Coordinates: 48°51′3.67″N 2°19′27.73″E / 48.8510194°N 2.3243694°E / 48.8510194; 2.3243694


 
 

 

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Paris & Ile de France Adventure Guide. Paris & Ile de France. Copyright © 2004 by Heather Stimmler-Hall. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Le Bon Marché" Read more