The ancient Roman route (Flanders road) leading to
Saint-Denis,
Pontoise and
Rouen competed with the Route de Senlis (
Rue Saint-Martin) but gained an advantage over it with the demolition of the Grand Pont (see
Pont au Change) and the development of the royal
Abbey of Saint-Denis, becoming the
triumphal way for royal entries into the capital. For this reason, it was also known as the rue Royale. Flanked by houses from 1134 onward, the street has borne the alternative names of Sellerie de Paris and Sellerie de la Grande Rue (13th century), Grand'rue de Paris, Grande rue, Rue des
Saints Innocents, and Grande chaussée de Monsieur/Monseigneur Saint-Denis (14th century). During the
French Revolution, it was known as the Rue de
Franciade. The street was one of the centres of the
June Rebellion of 1832, immortalised in
Victor Hugo's novel
Les Misérables, and which is referred to in the book as the "Epic of the Rue Saint-Denis". The street contains clothes shops, bars and restaurants, the church of
Saint-Leu-Saint-Gilles, a bank, and the Chambre des notaires building. ==Prostitution==