Rue des Martyrs
Cultural Site
About Rue des Martyrs
Rue des Martyrs stretches eight blocks uphill from Notre-Dame-de-Lorette métro to the foot of Montmartre, functioning as a working neighborhood artery rather than a tourist destination. You'll find proper Parisian commerce here: fromageries where locals debate cheese aging, wine shops with handwritten recommendations, and butchers who'll explain exactly how to cook that cut of lamb. The street serves residents from three arrondissements, creating an authentic slice of Paris commerce that feels unchanged since the 1950s.
Walking uphill, each block shifts character subtly. Near the bottom, office workers grab quick lunches at corner bistros. Mid-street around Rue Saint-Georges, the pace slows as residential life takes over with mothers pushing strollers into épiceries and elderly residents chatting outside pharmacies. The bakeries release waves of butter and yeast scents that follow you between shops. By Rue des Abbesses, you're in full Montmartre territory with steeper inclines and village-like quiet between the commercial stretches.
Most food tours skip this street entirely, which keeps it genuine but means fewer vendors speak English. Prices run about 20% less than tourist areas: excellent coffee costs €2-3, fresh croissants €1.20. Skip the restaurants, they're unremarkable. Focus on the food shops, especially Arnaud Delmontel bakery and the cheese shop at number 64. The walk takes an hour if you browse properly, but you could easily spend two hours tasting and buying provisions for an excellent picnic on Montmartre's slopes above.
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