Tower

This room is located on the second floor of the building, at the corner of Rue de l'École de Médecine and Boulevard Henri IV.

Its machicolations are the remnants of the old wall of the Saint Benoît College, dating from before the extension built between 1845 and 1852 to house the anatomy conservatory. They can be reached after climbing a very long spiral staircase. The effect of seeing the machicolations up close and being able to touch them—which are usually visible only at the very top of the building’s exterior facade—is striking.

This room served as the apartment for over 30 years of Jean-Joseph Bonaventure Laurens, who was the Faculty’s accountant from 1835 to 1867—a position roughly equivalent today to that of an administrative director.

This man of letters—a painter, writer, and composer—had set up his studio there and even hosted Franz Liszt. He asked the famous pianist to play for him to prove that he was indeed the virtuoso everyone said he was! So Liszt apparently played the piano at the Faculty!

This room, named after Théophraste Renaudot in honor of the famous Montpellier physician and founder of *La Gazette* (a pioneering publication in17th-century French print media), housed the Faculty’s archives for many years.

Although it is currently closed to the public due to safety regulations, it is one of the building’s many points of interest.