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Gambetta (Paris Métro)

Paris Métro line 3Paris Métro line 3bisParis Métro stations in the 20th arrondissement of ParisRailway stations in France opened in 1905
Metro de Paris Ligne 3 Gambetta 01
Metro de Paris Ligne 3 Gambetta 01

Gambetta (French: [ɡɑ̃bɛta] (listen)) is a station of the Paris Métro. It serves Line 3 and is the southern terminus of Line 3bis. Its located in the 20th arrondissement of Paris.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gambetta (Paris Métro) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gambetta (Paris Métro)
Place Gambetta, Paris 20th Arrondissement (Paris)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 48.864947 ° E 2.398451 °
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Address

Place Gambetta

Place Gambetta
75020 Paris, 20th Arrondissement (Paris)
Ile-de-France, France
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Metro de Paris Ligne 3 Gambetta 01
Metro de Paris Ligne 3 Gambetta 01
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Nearby Places

Communards' Wall
Communards' Wall

The Communards’ Wall (French: Mur des Fédérés) at the Père Lachaise cemetery is where, on May 28, 1871, during "Bloody Week", the final fighting of the Paris Commune, one-hundred and forty-seven fédérés or Commune soldiers, captured by the French army, were executed and buried in a common grave at the foot of the wall, along with another nineteen officers.The Père Lachaise cemetery was established in May 1804 on a land owned by the Jesuits for centuries, and where Père ("Father") Lachaise, confessor of Louis XIV, lived the latter part of his life. The cemetery of the aristocracy in the 19th century, it also received the remains of famous people from previous eras. During the spring of 1871 the last of the combatants of the Commune entrenched themselves in the cemetery. The French Army, which was summoned to suppress the Commune, won control towards the end of the afternoon of May 28, captured the remaining Commune soldiers. As with other prisoners taken during the Commune, those captured with weapons in hand, numbering 147, were lined up and executed. Those executed at the wall also included a group of Commune officers, who had been captured earlier at other locations, imprisoned in two army barracks nearby, tried by military tribunals, sentenced to death, and delivered to the cemetery for execution and burial. This brought the total number to an estimated but unconfirmed 166. They were all buried in the same common grave. The number executed and buried at the wall there is not known exactly, but is estimated at 166 by historian Michele Audin. Other casualties were brought to the cemetery later from other parts of the city and buried in the cemetery. The wall is now the site of an annual commemoration of the Commune and its casualties.