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    You are at:Home»History»The golden age of the cafés on the “Grands Boulevards”

    The golden age of the cafés on the “Grands Boulevards”

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    By paris-bistro on 15 June 2017 History

    Grands Boulevards en 1900

    But he was not the only one to have achieved success. After the opening of the Paris Opera in 1876, the Café de la Paix immediately became the place for influential political men to meet, as well as those from the finance world and from abroad.
    Also renowned were the Café Riche on the boulevard des Italiens, which was frequented by artists and literary people, and the Café Anglais, which was known for its private cabinet. The Café Anglais, founded in 1822, had become the most popular café in the whole of Europe at the time. Its original decor still entices with its mahogany and walnut wood and its grand mirrors decorated with gold leaf. But most come here nowadays to sample the dishes of one of the most famous chefs in Paris, Adolphe Dugléré.

    From Balzac to Maupassant, the great French writers have planted their decors.

    But the great work of Baron Haussmann marked the beginning of decadence for the elitists cafés of the boulevards. Although the theatres remained on the boulevards, the well-to-do clientele started to desert its nearby cafés for other places where theaters started to crop up. For example, along the Champs-Elysées the concept of open air cafés with concerts came along. Many flocked there to have a coffee in the open air while listening to opera. And the construction of two theatres around Châtelet made cafés such as the Zimmer famous. The Grand Boulevards were no longer the meeting centre of the elite.

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