Difference between revisions of "Cimetière des Batignolles"
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==The Infection== | ==The Infection== | ||
− | There is a an infection of [[Gallû]] here. [[A]] and [[C]] live here with a small infection of their kind. They have hollowed areas under the cemetery to live in. | + | There is a an infection of [[Gallû]] here. [[Albertine Martel| A]] and [[Cyrile Bonnet| C]] live here with a small infection of their kind. They have hollowed areas under the cemetery to live in. |
Latest revision as of 14:09, 24 November 2024
The Batignolles Cemetery (French: Cimetière des Batignolles) is a cemetery in Paris. History Boulevard Péripherique over Batignolles Cemetery
Batignolles Cemetery opened on 22 August 1833. Part of the cemetery had to be closed and the graves moved because of the construction of the great ring road (Boulevard Périphérique, between the exits of Porte de Clichy and Porte de Saint-Ouen).
Description
Extending over nearly eleven hectares, slightly larger than the Montmartre Cemetery, Batignolles Cemetery contains approximately fifteen thousand graves, and it is the fourth cemetery intra muros 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. Within its perimeter, there are approximately nine hundred mature trees, mostly chestnuts and maples. Because of the construction of apartment buildings next to the cemetery, the Avenue des Fortifications is no longer accessible by 2009.
Before the opening of Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois Russian Cemetery the cemetery was a popular burial place for members of the Russian Orthodox community. Many are buried in the carré russe-orthodoxe, division 25. Among them Léon Bakst, Sergei Lyapunov, Pavel Milyukov and Pavel Ryabushinsky. Feodor Chaliapin was buried here but his remains were later reburied in Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.
The grave of Paul Verlaine was originally in division 20 but had to be moved to the roundabout (at the crossing of Avenue Principale and Avenue Transversale).
The cemetery contains one British Commonwealth war grave, that of a Royal Air Force officer of 1918.
Location
The cemetery is located in the Épinettes district, in the northeastern part of the 17th arrondissement. The entry to the cemetery is at the intersection of Rue Saint-Just and Avenue du Cimetière des Batignolles. The cemetery is lodged between the Boulevard Périphérique and the Lycée International Honoré de Balzac.
The Infection
There is a an infection of Gallû here. A and C live here with a small infection of their kind. They have hollowed areas under the cemetery to live in.