The
Grands Boulevards are the quintessence of the Parisian boulevards. Their origin is a plan initiated by
Louis XIV's minister
Jean-Baptiste Colbert in the late 1660s, of comprehensive reforms and remodeling of Paris. Aside of the demilitarization of the former city walls and their replacement with a ring of Grand Boulevards, started in 1670, the plan included the establishment of the in 1667; the destruction of all gates of the ancient
Wall of Philip II Augustus on the left bank, started in 1673 and completed in 1783; the unification of professional regulations in the city and its outskirts () in 1673; the termination of lingering feudal authority over criminal justice in a number of mostly ecclesiastical enclaves that was transferred to the king's
Grand Châtelet in 1674; and the erection or refurbishment of monumental gates on key intersections, namely the
Porte Saint-Antoine in 1671, the , the
Porte Saint-Denis in 1672-1673, the
Porte Saint-Martin in 1674, and a massive triumphal arch to be erected on what is now the
Place de la Nation, started in the 1670s but abandoned around 1680 and whose unfinished structures were eventually demolished in 1716. If defined by that historic origin, the expression "Grands Boulevards" should only follow the thoroughfares along the former
Wall of Charles V and on the right bank, namely the
Boulevard Beaumarchais, ,
Boulevard du Temple, , , , ,
Boulevard Montmartre,
Boulevard des Italiens,
Boulevard des Capucines and
Boulevard de la Madeleine. However, Parisian habit also includes
Boulevard Haussmann, with its department stores
Printemps and
Galeries Lafayette, among the quintessential Grands Boulevards. The later opening of other major arteries such as
Boulevard Richard-Lenoir and has further reduced the salience of the original Grand Boulevards in the Paris topography. == "
Boulevard du Crime" ==