Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Fontaine Maubuée

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Fontaine Maubuée

Address
  
26-28 Rue de Venise, 75004 Paris, France

Similar
  
fontaine Boucherat, Fontaine de la Croix‑du‑Trahoir, Fontaine des Innocents, fontaine du Vert bois, Fontaine du Palmier

The Fontaine Maubuée is an 18th-century water fountain located at the corner of rue Saint-Martin and rue Venise in the 4th arrondissement of Paris. The fountain was originally at the corner of the rue Saint-Martin and the rue Maubuée. The site was originally occupied by one of the oldest fountains in Paris, which had been built in 1392 by King Charles VI of France. The name of the fountain referred to the either the bad vapors (mauvaise buée) or the bad washing, because of the poor quality of the water coming to the fountain from the springs of Belleville.

The present fountain was built by Jean Beausire and his son, Jean-Baptiste Augustin, in 1733. It is decorated with a bas-relief representing a rocaille vase, surrounded with roses and water plants. The fountain was dismantled and moved to its present location in 1937.

The older fountain on the site was the subject of a poem by François Villon.

References

Fontaine Maubuée Wikipedia