Barbès – Rochechouart (Paris Métro)

Barbès – Rochechouart
Date opened 31 January 1903 (1903)
Accesses Boul. de la Chapelle × boul. Magenta
Boul. de la Chapelle × boul. Barbès
1, boul. Rochechouart
2, boul. Rochechouart
45, boul. de la Chapelle
Municipality/
Arrondissement
the 9th arrondissement of Paris
Fare zone 1
Next stations
Paris Métro Line 2
Direction
Porte Dauphine
Direction
Nation
Anvers La Chapelle
Paris Métro Line 4
Direction
Porte de Clignancourt
Direction
Porte d'Orléans
Château Rouge Gare du Nord
List of stations of the Paris Métro
Location of metro station

Barbès-Rochechouart is a station on Paris Métro Line 2 and Line 4 at the point where the 9th, 10th, and 18th arrondissements all share a single point. This is also where the three boulevards, Boulevard de la Chapelle, Boulevard de Rochechouart, and Boulevard de Magenta, intersect at street level.

The elevated line-2 station was opened on 31 January 1903 as the Boulevard Barbès station, as part of the extension of line 2 from Anvers to Bagnolet (now called Alexandre Dumas). It was renamed to its current name eight days later. Line 2 descends into a tunnel to the west of the station. The underground line-4 station was opened on 21 April 1908 as part of the first section of the line from Châtelet to Porte de Clignancourt.

The station is named for the revolutionary, Armand Barbès, and the abbess, Marguerite de Rochechouart.

The disastrous fire of 10 August 1903 that resulted in eighty deaths at Couronnes station began here.

Also, in 1941, Colonel Pierre-Georges Fabien shot and killed a German soldier in the station, marking the beginning of the armed Résistance in Paris.

The station is the former location of the Barrière Poissonnière, a gate in the Wall of the Farmers-General built for the collection of excise taxes (the octroi). The gate was built between 1784 and 1788, and it was demolished in the nineteenth century.

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