Picpus Cemetery

Cemetery · Picpus

Picpus Cemetery

Cemetery · Picpus

2

Pour y acceder :, 35 Rue de Picpus, 75012 Paris, France

Photos

Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by beckybodnar (Atlas Obscura User)
Picpus Cemetery by Allison (Atlas Obscura User) (Allison Meier)
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null
Picpus Cemetery by null

Highlights

Private cemetery, French Revolution victims, Lafayette's grave  

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Pour y acceder :, 35 Rue de Picpus, 75012 Paris, France Get directions

parisinfo.com
@parisjetaime

Information

Static Map

Pour y acceder :, 35 Rue de Picpus, 75012 Paris, France Get directions

+33 1 43 44 18 54
parisinfo.com
@parisjetaime

Features

parking paid street
wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Oct 20, 2025

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Old Cemeteries in Paris

"Heads were rolling in Paris in the summer of 1794, and when you have that many bodies baking in the sun you need a convenient and quick place to dump them. Luckily for the revolutionaries operating the guillotine at Place de la Nation (then known as Place du Trône, and as the Place du Trône-Renversé during the Revolution), a convent with a pit-friendly garden was located just a few minutes wheelbarrow ride away. In June 1793, the French Revolution dissolved into chaos. King Louis XVI had been executed in December of 1792, leaving behind an absence of clear government, followed by food shortages and riots, and a backlash against the revolutionaries. The suppression of complaints came in the form of a year and a half of “La Terreur” (Reign of Terror) launched under Maximilien Robespierre, and saw the execution of an estimated 16,000-40,000 “enemies of the revolution.” Guillotines were set up in major plazas, hosting as many as 55 executions in a day. By June and July of the following year, the revolutionaries had run out of viable burial space in the normal locations, and they began looking for new real estate within the crowded center of Paris. The convent of the Chanoinesses de Saint-Augustin had been converted into a prison hospital in March of that year. In June, the garden was dug up to accommodate mass graves for approximately 1,300 men and women. Among the dead buried at the cemetery are sixteen Carmelite nuns known as the “Martyrs of Compiègne” who famously proceeded to their death singing hymns and were beatified by the Catholic church in 1906. Their story is memorialized books as well as in the opera Dialogues of the Carmelites by Francis Poulenc, which includes the sound of the dropping guillotine blade in the score. A plaque on the cemetery wall which reads “servit les muses, aima la sagesse, mourut pour la vérité” (“served the muses, loved wisdom, and died for the truth”) honors the poet André Chénier, one of the last to be executed on orders from Robespierre. On the 28th of July, Robespierre was himself guillotined at the Place de la Révolution. Fittingly, he was buried with others executed with him in another common grave (the Cimetière des Errancis, now gone). After the Revolution, the remains at Errancis were moved to the Paris Catacombs, its place marked by a simple plaque at No. 22, boulevard de Courcelles. An American flag marks the post-Revolutionary grave of the Marquis de Lafayette, a Frenchman who fought in the American Revolutionary War under George Washington. In the French Revolution he was part of the National Assembly, and drafted the Déclaration des droits de l’Homme et du Citoyen (Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen), France’s equivalent to the American Bill of Rights. He outlived both Revolutions (just barely), and went on to travel widely as a statesman. He died of pneumonia in 1834, and was buried at the Cimetière de Picpus under soil from Bunker Hill in Boston. Today, the Cimetière de Picpus is the largest private cemetery in Paris. It is remarkable not only for its grisly history, but also for the fact that men and women, adults and children, commoners and aristocrats all reside in the same grave. Their names are recorded on the walls of the convent chapel." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/old-cemeteries-in-paris
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@atlasobscura

9 Places to Experience the Turmoil of the French Revolution

"Heads were rolling in Paris in the summer of 1794, and when you have that many bodies baking in the sun you need a convenient and quick place to dump them. Luckily for the revolutionaries operating the guillotine at Place de la Nation (then known as Place du Trône, and as the Place du Trône-Renversé during the Revolution), a convent with a pit-friendly garden was located just a few minutes wheelbarrow ride away. In June 1793, the French Revolution dissolved into chaos. King Louis XVI had been executed in December of 1792, leaving behind an absence of clear government, followed by food shortages and riots, and a backlash against the revolutionaries. The suppression of complaints came in the form of a year and a half of “La Terreur” (Reign of Terror) launched under Maximilien Robespierre, and saw the execution of an estimated 16,000-40,000 “enemies of the revolution.” Guillotines were set up in major plazas, hosting as many as 55 executions in a day. By June and July of the following year, the revolutionaries had run out of viable burial space in the normal locations, and they began looking for new real estate within the crowded center of Paris. The convent of the Chanoinesses de Saint-Augustin had been converted into a prison hospital in March of that year. In June, the garden was dug up to accommodate mass graves for approximately 1,300 men and women. Among the dead buried at the cemetery are sixteen Carmelite nuns known as the “Martyrs of Compiègne” who famously proceeded to their death singing hymns and were beatified by the Catholic church in 1906. Their story is memorialized books as well as in the opera Dialogues of the Carmelites by Francis Poulenc, which includes the sound of the dropping guillotine blade in the score. A plaque on the cemetery wall which reads “servit les muses, aima la sagesse, mourut pour la vérité” (“served the muses, loved wisdom, and died for the truth”) honors the poet André Chénier, one of the last to be executed on orders from Robespierre. On the 28th of July, Robespierre was himself guillotined at the Place de la Révolution. Fittingly, he was buried with others executed with him in another common grave (the Cimetière des Errancis, now gone). After the Revolution, the remains at Errancis were moved to the Paris Catacombs, its place marked by a simple plaque at No. 22, boulevard de Courcelles. An American flag marks the post-Revolutionary grave of the Marquis de Lafayette, a Frenchman who fought in the American Revolutionary War under George Washington. In the French Revolution he was part of the National Assembly, and drafted the Déclaration des droits de l’Homme et du Citoyen (Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen), France’s equivalent to the American Bill of Rights. He outlived both Revolutions (just barely), and went on to travel widely as a statesman. He died of pneumonia in 1834, and was buried at the Cimetière de Picpus under soil from Bunker Hill in Boston. Today, the Cimetière de Picpus is the largest private cemetery in Paris. It is remarkable not only for its grisly history, but also for the fact that men and women, adults and children, commoners and aristocrats all reside in the same grave. Their names are recorded on the walls of the convent chapel." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/bastille-day-french-revolution
View Postcard for Picpus Cemetery

Louis and Elaine

Google
After three visits to paris, we finally got to visit Picpus Cemetery. This private cemetery is not easy to locate and is even harder to access. Many of the victims of The Terror, following the French Revolution are buried here in mass graves. We especially enjoyed seeing the grave of General Lafayette, hero of the American Revolution.

Eddie Super

Google
EXCELLENT EXPERIENCE! Extremely worth visiting this private cemetery . It’s not very well known, despite being an important part of history. Somber history of the victims of decapitation of the French revolution🇫🇷. Interesting facts: General Lafayette 🇺🇸 and his wife the marquise de Lafayette are buried here as well as other figures like general Alexandre Boharnais (Josephine’s first husband). Beautiful gardens 🪴⛲️and there is a pleasant person who welcomes you at the door. They have great books which you can buy on location. Also, since 1804 ,this private cemetery is leased and managed by the religious order of the sacred heart of jesus and mary. In fact, some of the founders of that order are buried on location. This place is not very turisty, which is great. No lines. If you search for directions via Google to arrive here, it’s best to search for the address, not by the name “Picpus cemetery” . It’s easier to find like that. I read some comments here that the place is hard to find. It happened to me but searched by the exact address and arrived quickly. Very close to the Nation train station. Recommended.

Heather Steinmiller

Google
Spent almost an hour trying to get the exact location of the place - Google Maps was NO help at all, and there is NO signage to inform you that you're in the right place. Head for the big wooden double doors at 35 Rue de Picpus, look to your right to push the entry buzzer. When you hear the click, push the left-most door *hard* - it's extremely heavy. (I tried pushing the wrong side multiple times - I apologized to the concierge once I was inside.) Pay your two euros, then head back to the little chapel for a quick look before exiting and continuing further back. Head right to access the actual cemetery. I was inspired to visit because I live in Yorktown, and it was the bicentennial of Lafayette's farewell tour of the (bigger) United States of 1824. There are other significant graves here - the sixteen nuns who went one by one to the guillotine singing hymns, as well as from more recent conflicts. I was most touched by the plaque of the father and son killed in WWII. (Thankfully there are some lovely chickens wandering around that lightened the atmosphere somewhat.) In spite of my difficulties in finding the cemetery, it was well worth it.

Peter Tunison

Google
Great place for a short visit, especially after reading the history of the place. Unique. Google maps pinpoints the location correctly but provides an impossible route to get there. Instead, head for the church and enter at the street gate by pushing the bell button and the concierge will admit you, pay euros, from then spend as much time here. The sun comes around to the Lafayette graves later in the day.

Brian Nick

Google
Wonderful visit to the tomb of the Marquis de Lafayette and the mass graves associated with the Terror during the French Revolution. One note: if you are using Google Maps to get here, type in the address (35 Rue de Picpus) not “Picpus Cemetery” or it will try to send you through a hospital gate.

Allen Parsons

Google
An ancient and slowly decaying burial ground, where the elements have long since wiped away inscriptions from the oldest headstones. But historically fascinating. Beside the Marquis de Lafayette, buried here in soil brought over from Bunker Hill, other decedents were beheading victims of the French Revolution’s Reign of Terror. The cemetery stands behind a small chapel, shielded from the street by a high fence and a patch of gravel. Small donation requested for entrance.

Sheilla L.

Google
Fantastic cemetery full of history! Do not follow Google Maps’ directions. Get off at metro stop Nation then walk down Rue Fabre d’Eglatine follow to Rue de Picpus until you get to number 35. Pay 2 Euros and enjoy the history. I do not know why more people are not visiting!

Rafael Saragosa

Google
At must see! Like I was stated in another review though, make sure you enter through the church door to gain access to the private cemetery. It was two euros to get in.