The Rue Laffitte is a street in the 9th arrondissement of Paris, located near the Metro stations Richelieu - Drouot and Notre-Dame-de-Lorette.
But in 1792, during the French Revolution, the prince had emigrated outside France and the street was renamed Rue Cerutti after Giuseppe Cerutti, an Italian former Jesuit and writer living in a mansion in the street at the junction with the Boulevard des Italiens, who became Republican and was elected to the French National Assembly.
[citation needed] After the Bourbon Restoration, the street's name was changed back to Rue d'Artois.
On 30 July 1830, with Adolphe Thiers and La Fayette, he took part in the Revolution of 1830: they offered the crown to the future King Louis Philippe I, because King Charles X had allowed soldiers to shoot civilians and because they feared that a republic would lead to disorder and foreign wars.
Dowager queen Kishwar Sultana of erstwhile princely state of Oudh, in Northern India, stayed at the Hôtel Papy in 1858 on this street after she returned from London, when Queen Victoria refused her plea to restore her son Wajid Ali Shah to the throne of Oudh.