The surveys carried out in two Ile-de-France farms and two village butchers plunge us into the heart of the history of contemporary Ile-de-France butcher. To meet the ever increasing demand for meat, the population of Paris and its suburbs, agricultural establishments observed at Sucy-en-Brie and La Queue-en-Brie, transformed their traditional buildings into intensive cattle breeding places. These animals were slaughtered in Paris, or in village 'slaughter houses'. At Orly, a large barn, a chicken coop, a slaughter house, a rendering plant and attics are spread around the courtyard of a village butcher. The archival work informs us of the presence of a butcher's shop at least since the early nineteenth century. In Neuilly-sur-Marne, the but...