La Rue de Grenelle in Paris is located in the 6th and 7th districts. With a length of 2,250 m, it crosses the districts of Saint-Germain des Pres, St. Thomas Aquinas, Disabled and Rue du Gros Caillou . In one way, it begins at the crossroads of the Red Cross, it ends by crossing the Avenue de La Bourdonnais (a few metres before the Champ de Mars). It bears his name because it connected Paris at the former village of Grenelle, but from the fourteenth century the street there as a path, the path called Nine, and is shown on the survey of 1529. It is also mentioned with the names of the cow path, the path of Justice Road Gibet or small path Port. In the fifteenth century, it becomes important and the names of great path of cows or large Garnelle path, then the seventeenth century path of the Forest or small path Grenelle. Finally, it was later designated under the street names Garanella Road Guarnelles or street Guernelles. In the eighteenth century the street will be called Grenelle-Saint-Germain.