The ‘Oberge des Mailletz’ is by far the oldest tavern of which any record can found in the City archives. In 1292, Adam des Mailletz, inn-keeper, paid a tithe of 18 sous and 6 deniers. This we learn from the Tax Register of the period. At the time it was founded, the Trois-Mailletz was the meeting place of masons, who under the supervision of Jehan de Chelles, carved out of white stone the biblical characters destined to grace the north and south choirs of Notre-Dame. Underneath the building, there are two floors of superimposed cellars: the deeper ones date from the Gallo-Roman period. What remains of the instruments of torture found in the cellars of the Petit-Châtelet have been housed here, along with some other restored objects. A modest bar counter, a long-haired patron who bizarrely manages never to be freshly shaven or downright bearded. A stove in the middle of the shabby room; simple straightforward folk, less drunk than at Rue de Bièvre, and less dirty. Just what we needed. Jacques Yonnet
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The Oberge des Mailletz is one of the oldest taverns in Paris but it was not always a tavern. At the time it was founded it was a meeting place for masons who were under the direction of Jehan de Chelles. The building also housed two floors of cellars which date back to the Gallo-Roman period. The instruments of torture were found in the cellars and some other restored objects such as an old stove can still be seen today.

Source: Paris Noir: The Secret History Of A City

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