Executive summary by Darmansjah
The Vieux Lyon is the largest Renaissance district of Lyon
in the 5th arrondissement.
This zone is served by the metro line D
In 1954, Vieux-Lyon, the city's oldest district, became the
first site in France to be protected under the Malraux law to protect France's
cultural sites. Covering an area of 424 hectares at the foot of the Fourvière
hill, it is one of Europe’s most extensive Renaissance neighborhoods.
The Saint Jean quarter: in the Middle Ages, this was the
focus of political and religious power. The Cathedral of St Jean, seat of the
Primate of Gaul, a title still conferred upon the archbishop of Lyon, is a good
example of Gothic architecture. The Manecanterie adjoining the cathedral is one
of Lyon's few extant Romanesque buildings. Formerly a choir school, it now
houses the museum of the cathedral’s treasures. Saint Jean is also home to the
Museum of Miniatures and Film Sets, located in a building that was the Golden
Cross Inn in the 15th century.
The Saint-Paul section: in the 15th and 16th centuries
predominately Italian banker-merchants moved into sumptuous urban residences
here called hôtels particuliers. The Hôtel Bullioud and the Hôtel de Gadagne
are two magnificent examples and the latter now houses the Lyon Historical
Museum and the International Puppet Museum. The Loge du Change stands as
testimony to the period when trade fairs made the city wealthy. The Saint Paul
church with its Romanesque lantern tower and its spectacular spire mark the
section’s northern extremity.
The Saint Georges section: silk weavers settled here
beginning in the 16th century before moving to the Croix Rousse hill in the
19th century. In 1844, the architect Pierre Bossan rebuilt the
Saint-Georges[disambiguation needed] church on the banks of the Saônein a
neo-Gothic style. In the Middle Ages, when there were only a few parallel
streets between the hill and the Saône, the first traboules were built. Derived
from the Latin trans-ambulare, meaning to pass through, traboules are corridors
through buildings and their courtyards, connecting one street directly with
another. Visitors are delighted to discover an architectural heritage of
galleries and spiral staircases in these secret passageways, as unexpected as
they are unique.
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