Ranelagh (Paris Metro)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ranelagh |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date opened | 1922 | ||||||
Accesses | |||||||
Municipality/ Arrondissement |
Paris 16e | ||||||
Fare zone | 1 | ||||||
Next stations | |||||||
|
|||||||
List of stations of the Paris Métro |
Ranelagh is a station of the Paris Métro on the Rue de Ranelagh.
It is named after Lord Ranelagh, an English peer and amateur at music, who built a rotunda for concerts in the park of his property in Chelsea in 1750. A similar establishment was established on the grounds of the Château de la Muette in 1774. The place was fashionable under Marie Antoinette, under the Directory and then again under the Restoration. It disappeared in 1858 with the creation of the Bois de Boulogne.
Paris Métro | Line 9 |
---|---|
Pont de Sèvres · Billancourt · Marcel Sembat · Porte de Saint-Cloud · Exelmans · Michel-Ange — Molitor ⇒ 10 (eastbound) · Michel-Ange — Auteuil ⇒ 10 (westbound) · Jasmin · Ranelagh · La Muette · Rue de la Pompe · Trocadéro ⇒ 6 · Iéna · Alma — Marceau · Franklin D. Roosevelt ⇒ 1 · Saint-Philippe du Roule · Miromesnil ⇒ 13 · Saint-Augustin ⇒ 14 · Havre — Caumartin ⇒ 3 A E · Chaussée d'Antin — La Fayette ⇒ 7 · Richelieu — Drouot ⇒ 8 · Grands Boulevards · Bonne Nouvelle · Strasbourg — Saint-Denis ⇒ 4 8 · République ⇒ 3 5 8 11 · Oberkampf ⇒ 5 · Saint-Ambroise · Voltaire · Charonne · Rue des Boulets · Nation ⇒ 1 2 6 A · Buzenval · Maraîchers · Porte de Montreuil · Robespierre · Croix de Chavaux · Mairie de Montreuil |