INDEX to the Article PARIS. 
A BBAYE, a military prifon, 461. 
Abbey of St. Genevieve and of St. Ger¬ 
main des Pres, 471 ; of Val de Grace, 
472 - . . ■ 
AGe additionel, or imperial confhtution, 
522 ; accepted, 524, 5. 
Agricultural Society, 492. 
Allee des Veuves, Widows’ Walk, 456. 
Altar of the Obelilks, 477. 
Ambigu Comique,484. 
Angouleme, duke and duchefs, their ad¬ 
ventures at Bourdeaux, 518 ; the duke is 
taken prifoner, and fet at liberty, 519. 
Antwerp, anxiety of the fugitives and in¬ 
habitants previous to the battle of Wa¬ 
terloo, 538. 
AqueduGs and Canals, 487. 
Arcueil, and itsaqueduG, 497. 
Arms and powder manufaGories, deftroyed 
by the Pru Ilians, 491. 
Atheneum of Arts, 465. 
--— of Paris, 465. 
Attorneys, not conveyancers, 461. 
Auteuil, near PafTy, 494. 
Bagatelle, feat of the duke d’Artois, 494. 
Bagneux, near Chatilion, 497. 
Bank of France, 469, 70 ; faving-banks, 
470. 
Bar'oe Marbois, 581, 2. 
Baftile, firft ereGion of, 445. 
Baths and fwimming-fchools, 489. 
Bazars, French and Englilh, 457. 
Bear-garden at Paris, 4S5. 
Belleville, near Paris, 498. 
Bellevue, villa of Mad. de Pompadour,496. 
Berry, duke of, difliked by the army, 507 ; 
and by the people, 581; his marriage, 
and affaffination, 591 ; pofthumous fon, 
592. 
Bertrand, 504; his noble behaviour, 516; 
accompanies Bonaparte to St. Helena, 
566; his extraordinary opinion of Napo¬ 
leon’s talents, 568 ; condemned to death, 
>9- 
Bicetre prifon, 461 5 and mad-houfe, 482. 
Blind, hofpital for the, 480, 1. 
Blucher, his perilous fituation at Ligny, 
533 ; remarks on his conduct, 535 ; 
ready to co-operate with Wellington, 
536; his arrival at the field of Waterloo, 
543 ; completes the defeat of the French, 
545 ; his brutal behaviour contrafted with 
that of Wellington, 553 ; his letter to 
Davouft, 556; infills upon ftripping the 
Louvre and the Mufeum, 576; his polite 
letter on that fubjeG, 576, 7. 
Bonaparte. See Napoleon. 
Bonaparte, Jerome, at the battle of Waler- 
loo, 539, 40. 
Bondi and its foreft, 498. 
Boulevards, firft contrived by Louis XIV. 
445 ; their progreffive improvement, 
492 ; amufing fcenes, 493 ; hardly fuf- 
pended by the fxege, 555. 
Boulogne, and its Wood, 493. 
Bourbon, duke of, his fruitlefs attempt to 
raife an infurreGion in La Vendee, 517 ; 
declines taking the title of Prince of 
Conoe, 591. 
Bourg la Reine, once . the refidence of 
Henry IV. 497. 
Bridges, 456,461, 2, 486, 7. 
Brie fur Marne, 497. 
Brune, marlhal, 559 ; murdered, 560. 
Brunfwickers defeated at Quatre Bras, and 
the prince killed, 532. 
Bruffels, terrible panic there, 537. 
Canal de l’Ourcq, 487. 
Carnot, promoted by Napoleon on his re¬ 
turn from Elba^ 115 ; anecdotes of him, 
515, 16 ; advifes the emperor to eftablifli 
fchools of mutual inftruGion, 517; mi- 
nifter of the interior, 550 ; addreffes the 
chambers, 551; chofen one of the pro- 
vilional government after the abdication, 
552 ; blames Bonaparte for not fortifying 
Paris on the fouth, 556. 
Caftlereagh, lord, (now marquis of Lon¬ 
donderry,) difi’olves the provifional go¬ 
vernment of France, 558. 
Catacombs of Paris, their origin, 475 ; de¬ 
ferred, 476, 7. 
Cattle-market, 490. 
Cazes, due de, 581. 
Cemetery of the Holy Innocents, 474 ; now 
a market for vegetables, 489 j of Pere 
la Chaife and of Montmartre, 478 ; of 
la Morgue, &c. 479. 
Chambre des Deputes, Houfe of Commons, 
459. S9°- 
Chambre des Pairs, Houfe of Lords, 458, 
59°. 
Champ de Mars, 467, 522, 4, 5. 
-Elyfees, Elyfian Fields, 456. 
Champagne, a Flemilh painter, 454. 
Chantilly, how ruined, 499 ; inhabited by 
the due de Bourbon, 500. 
Charenton, and its hofpital for lunatics, 
497- 
Charitable inftitutions, 479 ; remarks on 
the poor, 482. 
Charlemagne eftabli/hed fchools at Paris, 
445* 
Charter of Frauce, 590. 
Chartrand,geheral, condemned and /hot,589. 
Ohartreux, monaitery of the, 458, 9. 
Chatilion and its caftles, 497. 
Child-murder unknown in France, 480. 
China and glafs manufaGories, 491. 
Choify leRoi, its former magnificence, 497. 
Churches before the revolution, 446 ; at 
prefent; St. Germain 1’Auxerrois, 455; 
St. Sulpice, 459 ; la Sainte Chapelle, 
460; St. Gervais, 469 ; Notre Dame, 
470 ; St. Germain des Pres, St. Etienne 
du Mont, St. Louis, St. Paul, and St. 
Merry, 471; Madelaine, St. Euftache, 
St. Francois Xavier, Sorbo'nne, St. Roch, 
St. Philippe, St. Nicolas, St. Jacques, 
and St. Genevieve, 472, afterwards cal¬ 
led the Pantheon, 473. 
Clarke, duke of Feltre, 581. 
Claulel, general, fecures Bourdeaux for 
Napoleon, 318, 19; forced to retire with 
his army, 5C0; fubmits to the king, 561. 
Clichy la Garenne, 499. 
Cloth-hall and Rag-fair, 489, 
Clovis firft makes Paris the feat of govern¬ 
ment, 444. 
Colleges of the royal ufiiverfity, 467. 
Committee of longitude, 492. 
Conciergerie prifon, 261. 
Congrefs of Vienna, 501 ; receives the Pro- 
teft of the emprefs Maria-Louifa, 503 ; 
on hearing that Napoleon was in France, 
publifiies a Declaration, and enters into 
a Treaty, againft him, 512, 13, 14; the 
AG of Congrefs, by which the affairs of 
Europe were placed nearly on their pre¬ 
fent footing, 580, 1. 
Confervatory of ufeful Machines, 465, 6. 
Convention for the furrender of Paris, 557. 
Convents before the revolution, 446 ; fince, 
473- 
Conveyancers, a diftinG ciafs of lawyers in 
France, 461. 
Cordova in Spain the firft paved city, 445. 
Corn-market, 490. 
Corfin, governor of Antibes, 505. 
Courbevoye, a pleafant village, 500. 
Cours de la Reine, Queen’s Courfe, 456 
Court of appeal, of audit, initiatory of re- 
quefts, and royal, 460. 
Cuirafiiers, a mol formidable body of ca¬ 
valry, 541. 
Davouft, his account of the remains of the 
army, 351 ; his letter to Wellington and 
Blucher, and to the houfe of reprefen- 
tatives, 556 ; at length prevails upon his 
army to fubmit to the king, 560, 1. 
Deaf and Dumb inftitution, 446, 4.81. 
Denmark, cruelly treated by the allies, 
380, 1. 
Delbrofles, architeG of the Luxembourg, 
438; and of the Palais de Juftice, 460. 
Drawing-fchools, 468, 
Drouet, the conftant attendant of Napo¬ 
leon, 5115 his account of the battle of 
Waterloo, 549; tried at Paris, and ac¬ 
quitted, 589. 
Ecouen la Hautefeuille, 499. 
Enghein, duke of, his bones dug up, 590. 
Engineers, fchool for, 468. 
England retains fume of her conquefts, 580. 
Engraving on glafs, 49 T . 
Epinay fur Seine, two miles from Paris, 500. 
Erlon, his co.nduG at Lille, and narrow el- 
cape, 508. 
Evening’s Rendezvous, a curious fpecies of 
amufement, 483. 
Exchange, a new one in progrefs, 458. 
Female charaGer delineated, 450, s. 
Feuillade, marlhal de !a, 458. 
Fi/h in the Catacombs, 477. 
Fielh-markets, 489. 
Flower and fruit markets, 489. 
Fontenay aux Bois, 498. 
Force, two prilons fo called, 461. 
Fouche duke of Otranto, 549 ; his double 
dealing, 550, 567 ; becomes prefident of 
the provifional government after the ab¬ 
dication, 532 ; his letter to the duke of 
Wellington, 353,4; how regarded by Bo¬ 
naparte’s fuite, 566 ; outwits his mafte/r 
in the affair of the abdication, 567 5 
makes his peace with Louis, and ap¬ 
pointed minifter of police, his death and 
charaGer, 558. 
Foundling hofpitals in Paris, 480. 
Fountain of St. Sulpice, and of the Rue 
Vaugirard, 459 ; of the Samaritan, 477 ; 
de Grenelle, des Innocens, &C.488. 
Francis I. greatly embelliftied the city of 
Paris, 445. 
Frederic-.William, king of Pruffia, his pre¬ 
paration for war, and addrefs to the peo¬ 
ple, 523 ; his force to oppofe Napoleon, 
530. 
French and Italians compared, 449. 
Frimont, the Auftrian general, 536; forces 
marlhal Suchef to retreat, takes Lyons, 
&c. 559. 
Gaming and other amufemer.ts, 450; licsn- 
fed by government, 457. 
Garde-meuble, or Wardrobe, 456. 
Garden of the Tuileries, 452 j of the Lux 
embourg, 458. 
Gates of Paris, 590. 
Gentilly and its aqueduG, 497. 
Germanic Confederation, 580. 
Girardin on the ftate of the nation, 461. 
Ganelin’s tapeftry-manufaGory, 491. 
Gordon, Col. put to death by Gen. Bonnaire, 
5 S 9- 
Granary 
