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      • Both names are used in English and French, although Saint-Jacques is the most common for geographical reference. St. James Street is usually used in reference to the street's historic importance as a financial district.
      www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Saint_Jacques_Street
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  2. Saint Jacques Street (French: rue Saint-Jacques), or St. James Street, is a major street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, running from Old Montreal westward to Lachine. The street is commonly known by two names, "St. James Street" in English (after St. James's, London) and rue Saint-Jacques in French.

  3. Saint Jacques Street (officially in French: rue Saint-Jacques), or St. James Street, is a major street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, running from Old Montreal westward to Lachine.

    • The Cardo Maximus
    • Beyond The Left Bank
    • Rue Saint-Jacques: A Safe Place!
    • The Street After The Roman Era
    • Saint-Séverin-Saint-Nicolas Church
    • The Sorbonne University
    • Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas Church
    • Val de Grâce Hospital
    • A Tragic Explosion in June 2023
    • More About Paris’ Oldest Street and Its Neighbourhood

    First, Roman Paris was organised according to the cardo maximus. This was the name the Romans gave to a city planning model applied in towns in Italy. In turn, the Romans borrowed it from the Greeks. The cardo maximusreferred to a town layout based on a primary north-south axis. That street was crossed in the middle by a less-important east-west ax...

    On the Right Bank, the cardo maximus is continued by today’s rue Saint-Martin. Two wooden bridges spanned the river to reach the Ile de la Cité: Petit-Pont on the Left Bank and Grand-Pont (Pont Notre-Dame) on the Right Bank. Several less important east-west axes crossed the cardo maximus on the Left Bank. The Decumanifollowed today’s rue Cujas, rue...

    The central part of the city was on the left bank of the Seine, which was higher and less prone to flood. The centre point where the Cardo and Decumanus met is at number 172-174 rue Saint-Jacques. From there, the grid pattern of Lutetia was drawn, forming a network of orthogonal roads which divided Lutetia into insulae (blocks of houses and public ...

    However, its width has varied over time, and most of the houses along it were built between the 18th and 20th centuries. And the roadway is higher than the ancient Cardo. During the Middle Ages, pilgrims to Santiago de Compostelafrequented the street, hence its name (rue Saint-Jacques = St. James street). Its name comes from an old chapel in a medi...

    Arguably one of the most beautiful Gothic churches in Paris! Saint-Séverin church is a Flamboyant Gothic sanctuary built in the mid-13th century and finished in the 15th century. The façade (on rue des Prêtres Saint-Séverin) dates from the 13th century. It includes a portal that once belonged to a Ile de la Cité church that was demolished in 1837. ...

    The east side of the world-famous Sorbonne University borders rue Saint-Jacques. It is an old College of Theology founded by a royal chaplain, Robert de Sorbon, in the mid-13th century and became the seat of the University of Paris. The present-day buildings date back to 1885.

    Gaston of Orléans, brother of King Louis XIII, laid the foundation stone of the catholic church in 1630. The neo-Classical sanctuary was completed in 1684. Its façade shows a decoration with four columns supporting an entablature and a triangular pediment. A square tower flanks its south part.

    The church of Val de Grâce has one of Paris’ most impressive domes. The Gesù Church in Rome inspired the Baroque church. Architect Lemercier built the Val de Grâce between 1645 and 1665. Its façades show a double series of superimposed columns and two triangular pediments. In addition, the magnificent dome is one of the highest in Paris. Finally, t...

    On the 21st of June 2023, an explosion at no. 277, Rue Saint-Jacques made headlines around the world. The explosion, which injured around fifty people and one dead, is suspected to have been caused by a gas leak. The explosion caused the collapse of the 17th-century pavilion closing off the courtyard of the Notre-Dame du Val-de-Grâce church to the ...

  4. Saint Jacques Street is a major street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The street has had two official names: St. James Street in English (never spelled "Saint") after St. James's, London; and its current appellation, rue Saint-Jacques, in French.

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  6. Saint Jacques Street, or St. James Street, is a major street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The street is commonly known by two names, 'St. James Street' in English (after St. James's, London) and rue Saint-Jacques in French.

  7. Rue St-Jacques. Known as the Wall St of Canada into the 1930s, Rue St-Jacques was lined with the head offices of insurance companies and banks that proclaimed Montréal’s prosperity for the best part of a century. In those days it was known as St James St.