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3 - ‘The strategy of the generals of Africa shattered’: the Restoration, Orleanist and Second Republic Years, 1815–1851

Keith Reader
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
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Summary

The July Column which now stands in the centre of the Place de la Bastille was a long time in the planning. The foundation-stone of a column, which was to sit atop a scale model of the fortress, had been laid on 14 July 1792, but the Convention abandoned the project. Jacques-Louis David, foreshadowing the Egyptophilia of Napoleon's elephant, built a large plaster fountain in 1793 in the form of the goddess Isis, but this was a transitory phenomenon. Not until Louis-Philippe had taken power, in 1830, was it decided to erect a monument not only to 1789 but also to the July Days that had brought him to power. For the revolutionary Faubourg this was a dubious tribute; to quote Jean-Paul Blais:

Marquer dans ce quartier la naissance de la monarchie parlementaire est une récupération affichée de la colère des faubourgs. N'est-ce pas une manière d'affirmer que la liberté et l'ordre appartiennent d'abord au pouvoir dominant?

To mark in this quartier the birth of parliamentary monarchy was a clear-cut recuperation of the anger of the faubourgs. Was it not a way of affirming that liberty and order belong above all to the dominant regime?

Hugo, for his part, was to describe the column as ‘le monument manqué d'une révolution avortée’ / ‘the failed monument of an abortive revolution’, all but disregarding its homage to 1789 and perceiving it, with a measure of accuracy, as a eulogy to the Orleanist monarchy.

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The Place de la Bastille
The Story of a Quartier
, pp. 44 - 63
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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