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Restaurant L'Escargot Montorgueil - Paris 1st à Paris 1er dans Paris 1er

Patrimoine classé
Restaurant classé MH

Restaurant L'Escargot Montorgueil - Paris 1st

    38 Rue Montorgueil
    75001 Paris 1er Arrondissement
Ownership of a private company
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Restaurant LEscargot Montorgueil - Paris 1er
Crédit photo : Oderik - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1832
Restaurant Foundation
1875
Official opening
1900
Renovation by Lecomte
1919
Purchased by André Terrail
12 juin 1998
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The rooms on the ground floor, the front and its ornaments (see AQ 162): inscription by order of 12 June 1998

Key figures

Georges Clairin - Painter Author of the 1900 ceiling for Sarah Bernhardt.
Sarah Bernhardt - Actress and former owner Ceiling of his dining room recovered.
André Terrail - Owner (from 1919) Buyer and renovator of the restaurant.
Marcel Proust - Famous customer Writer attending the restaurant.
Pablo Picasso - Famous customer Artist who visited the establishment.
Charlie Chaplin - Famous customer Actor among the regulars.

Origin and history

The restaurant L'Escargot Montorgueil, located at the corner of Montorgueil and Maucounsel streets in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, is one of the oldest restaurants in the capital, founded in 1832. He retained his original 19th-century sign as well as a typical Second Empire decoration, including a ceiling painted by Georges Clairin in 1900, originally housed in Sarah Bernhardt's mansion. Specializing in snails and Burgundy cuisine, he welcomed personalities such as Marcel Proust, Pablo Picasso or Charlie Chaplin, making it an emblematic place for Parisian life.

The establishment officially opened in 1875 under the management of the wine merchants Mignard and Bourreau, before being taken over in 1900 by Théodore Lecomte, who undertook important decoration work. In 1919, André Terrail bought the restaurant and installed the painted ceiling of Sarah Bernhardt, recovered in the sales hall. The present decor, combining elements from 1875 (caissons, diamond panels) and additions from the early 20th century (column staircase, engraved glasses), has been partially restored in recent years. Ranked a historic monument in 1998, it bears witness to the art of living in Paris between the 19th and 20th centuries.

The restaurant is distinguished by its interior architecture, with a walled entrance, a room divided by a half-cloison, and a staircase leading to the first floor. The protected elements include the ground floor rooms, the front and its ornaments, reflecting both the Second Empire heritage and the early twentieth century transformations. Although some enlargements have disappeared, such as the one towards rue Étienne Marcel, the ensemble retains a historical atmosphere, reinforced by details such as round-bosse snails or acid-engraved glasses.

The Escargot Montorgueil embodies the Parisian gastronomic tradition, linked to the nearby Halles, once the heart of the city's supplier. Its classification as a historical monument highlights its role in cultural heritage, combining art, history and gastronomy. The references to its illustrious clients and its unique decor make it a place of memory, where the history of Paris, the art of the table and the prominent figures of the 19th and 20th centuries intersect.

External links