Ville | Saint-Rémy-de-Provence |
Code postal | 13210 |
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Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income.
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Adresse
Ville | Saint-Rémy-de-Provence |
Code postal | 13210 |
Geolocalisation
Description
Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income. Rue Nostradamus This ancient street extends towards the northern side of the boulevards and harbours vestiges of Medieval and Renaissance buildings. A plaque dated 1487 can still be seen outside no. 13, engraved in the old language of Provençal and referring to a ‘four banal’ – a communal oven – that stood on this site in former times. Across the little Place Jean de Renaud square is the Sainte Anne neighbourhood. This is where the poorest peasants lived, crammed together in tiny dwellings along the narrow streets. In the 19th century people raised silkworms inside their homes, which provided them with a significant income.
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