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Levallois-Perret (Municipality, Hauts-de-Seine, France)

Last modified: 2003-05-31 by ivan sache
Keywords: hauts-de-seine | levallois-perret | crown: mural (yellow) | bees: 3 (yellow) | bottle: perfum (yellow) | cog wheel (yellow) |
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[Flag of Levallois-Perret]by Arnaud Leroy

Source: Mairie de Levallois-Perret


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Presentation of the municipality

Levallois-Perret is a city of 50,000 inhabitants bordering the north-west of Paris.

In the beginning of the XIXth century, a dozen of landowners owned agricultural and fallow land located on the municipalities of Neuilly and Clichy. The area was a former possession of the Royal abbey of St. Denis, which progressively abandoned it. In 1822, landowner Jean-Jacques Perret divided 20 hectares of land into plots for sale. The area was named Champ-Perret (Perret-Field), and belonged to the municipality of Neuilly. In 1845, another landowner, M. Noël, sold his land to Nicolas-Eugène Levallois. The plans of a village were designed. In 1854, the railway from Paris reached the village, where a church and a market were built in 1854 and 1858, respectively. Street lighting was installed in 1855.
The industrial development of Levallois-Perret started in 1860 when the perfumer Antonin Raynaud built there the Oriza perfumery. He was rapidly followed by the perfumery Roger-et-Ga