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Île des Cygnes (former island)


The île des Cygnes or île Maquerelle was an island on the river Seine in Paris. It was in the north-west part of the 7th arrondissement, between rue de l'Université and the Seine, the Invalides and the Champ de Mars. The Musée du quai Branly is located on it.

It was formed by the merger of the islets known as île des Treilles, île aux Vaches, île Maquerelle, île de Jérusalem and île de Longchamp, and was merged into the rive gauche of the Seine at the end of the 18th century.

An oak pirogue, built with fir plugs, discovered in August 1806 during the construction of the footings for Pont d'Iéna, was thought to be a Norman boat dating to the Siege of Paris in 885/86, although some scholars believe that it may have dated to the Sequani tribe from the first century B.C.

In the 13th century the peasants of Chaillot on the opposite bank had the right to graze their cattle on the île Maquerelle, in exchange for a payment in kind paid to the Abbaye de Saint-Germain-des-Prés. The right to fermage was 20 livres in 1492, and the bail de l'herbe rose to 27 livres in 1551. In 1572 1,200 victims of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre were buried here. The island was renamed Île des Cygnes after the swans placed there by a royal decree of 16 October 1676. The garde-cygnes were in charge of looking after them "from pont de Saint-Cloud as far as Saint-Maur and Corbeil" during the winter. The garde-cygnes's house was inventoried among the royal building accounts. The island was also the site of the ministry of public works's dépôt des marbres.


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