The origins of this thoroughfare are ancient, dating back to
Neolithic times. As with today's Rue Galande, Rue Lagrange, Rue de la
Montagne Sainte-Geneviève and Rue Descartes, it was a Roman road running from the Roman
Rive Gauche city south to Italy. From the
Middle Ages, a church along this section of roadway became centre of a
Bourg Saint-Médard (Saint-Médard village), and from 1724 was integrated into Paris as the main artery of the
Faubourg Saint Médard. The
Diderot family moved at no. 6 rue Mouffetard in April 1746, where lived also
François-Jacques Guillotte, a police officer who wrote an article (
Pont militaire) for the
Encyclopédie by Diderot. The area remained relatively unchanged because of its location on the
Montagne Sainte-Geneviève, which protected it from
Baron Haussmann's redevelopment during the reign of
Napoleon III. The
École de Paris painter
Isaac Frenkel Frenel lived in the street from the 1950s until his death in 1981. ==Cultural references==