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- Q1811328 subject Q7642817.
- Q1811328 subject Q8379899.
- Q1811328 subject Q8468607.
- Q1811328 subject Q8486007.
- Q1811328 subject Q8888469.
- Q1811328 subject Q8958513.
- Q1811328 subject Q9562389.
- Q1811328 abstract "Several successive city walls surrounded Paris from ancient times through until the twentieth century, except for between 1670 (when Louis XIV ordered the demolition of the Louis XIII Wall) and 1785 (when construction began on the Wall of the Farmers-General). The walls served to defend the town, protect inhabitants, and assess goods sold in Paris. City walls of Paris include: a Gaulish enclosure (location unknown). a Gallo-Roman wall. two medieval walls, one of which was the Wall of Philippe Auguste. the Wall of Charles V, extending on the right bank. the Louis XIII Wall, extending on the western part of the right bank. the Wall of the Farmers-General, for tax purposes. the Thiers wall.As Paris expanded over time, new walls were built to consolidate the existing city with new houses, gardens, and vegetable fields. Existing walls would eventually be destroyed and its site built up into a street or boulevard. Only a few sections of the Wall of the Farmers-General (pavilions of Claude Nicolas Ledoux) and the Wall of Philippe Auguste survive. The walls' influence on modern Paris can still be seen on some of its major streets and boulevards such as: The 'Grands boulevards' (main streets), built by replacing the Charles V and Louis XIII Walls. The parallel streets Rue de Cléry and Rue d'Aboukir (2nd Arrondissement) tracing the route of the Charles V Wall. The outer boulevards, built in place of the Wall of the Farmers-General. The 'boulevards des Maréchaux' (Boulevards of the Marshals, a loop encircling the city consisting of boulevards named for the Marshals of France), built to replace the Thiers Wall. The Boulevard périphérique (ring road or beltway), built outside the boulevards des Maréchaux.".
- Q1811328 thumbnail The_city_limits_of_Paris_from_the_4th_century_to_2015.svg?width=300.
- Q1811328 wikiPageExternalLink Enceintes.
- Q1811328 wikiPageExternalLink pages_4_a_7_de_bm_malak_novembre_n_214_2.pdf.
- Q1811328 wikiPageExternalLink index.php?pge=110.
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- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q7642817.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q7742.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q8379899.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q8468607.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q8486007.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q849777.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q8888469.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q8958513.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q948008.
- Q1811328 wikiPageWikiLink Q9562389.
- Q1811328 comment "Several successive city walls surrounded Paris from ancient times through until the twentieth century, except for between 1670 (when Louis XIV ordered the demolition of the Louis XIII Wall) and 1785 (when construction began on the Wall of the Farmers-General). The walls served to defend the town, protect inhabitants, and assess goods sold in Paris. City walls of Paris include: a Gaulish enclosure (location unknown). a Gallo-Roman wall.".
- Q1811328 label "City walls of Paris".
- Q1811328 depiction The_city_limits_of_Paris_from_the_4th_century_to_2015.svg.