| History of the Palais Conti
Charlemagne
The Monnaie de Paris is one of the oldest
French institutions. An official statement
dating back to the time of Charles the
Bald : the edict of Pitres (864) bears
witness to this. To ensure better control
over the minting premises, the emperor
decided to limit the number of workshops
to 10. Besides Rouen, Reims and Sens,
there was also a workshop in Paris.
This organisation was to break up according
to the turmoil of history and power struggles.
Quai de Conti
The Monnaie de Paris was established successively
: at the Palais de la Cité (City
Palace), then on the right bank : in
the Marais, at Saint-Jacques-de-la-Boucherie,
then rue de la Monnaie.
Under Louis XV, the Mint was transferred
to the left bank, to its current site,
in the former Hotel de Conti (which had
been Hotel de Nesle, de Nevers, de Guénégaud
then de Conti).
Louis XV
The Hotel de la Monnaie is one of the most
beautiful neo-classic monuments of the
XVIIIth century. It is the work of the
architect Jacques-Denis ANTOINE, to whom
Louis XV entrusted the building from
1771 to 1775.
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