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Belle Époque

The Belle Époque or La Belle Époque (French: [bɛlepɔk]; French for "Beautiful Epoch") is a period of French, Belgian and European history, usually considered to begin around 1871–1880 and to end with the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Occurring during the era of the Third French Republic, it was a period characterised by optimism, regional peace, economic prosperity, colonial expansion, and technological, scientific, and cultural innovations. In this era of France's cultural and artistic climate (particularly within Paris), the arts markedly flourished, and numerous masterpieces of literature, music, theatre, and visual art gained extensive recognition.

Belle Époque
1871/1880–1914
Including
Leader(s)Patrice de MacMahon, Jules Grevy, Jules Ferry, Sadi Carnot, Georges Boulanger, Raymond Poincaré
Chronology

The Belle Époque was so named in retrospect, when it began to be considered a continental European "Golden Age" in contrast to the horrors of the Napoleonic Wars and World War I. The Belle Époque was a period in which, according to historian R. R. Palmer, "European civilisation achieved its greatest power in global politics, and also exerted its maximum influence upon peoples outside Europe."[1]

Popular culture and fashions

 
Grand foyer of the Folies Bergère cabaret

Two devastating world wars and their aftermath made the Belle Époque appear to be a time of joie de vivre (joy of living) in contrast to 20th century hardships. It was also a period of stability that France enjoyed after the tumult of the early years of the Third Republic, featuring defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, the uprising of the Paris Commune, and the fall of General Georges Ernest Boulanger. The defeat of Boulanger, and the celebrations tied to the 1889 World's Fair in Paris, launched an era of optimism and affluence. French imperialism was in its prime. It was a cultural center of global influence, its educational, scientific and medical institutions were at the leading edge of Europe.[2]

It was not entirely the reality of life in Paris or in France, however. France had a large economic underclass who never experienced much of the Belle Époque's wonders and entertainments.[3] Poverty remained endemic in Paris's urban slums and rural peasantry for decades after the Belle Époque ended.[4][5] Conflicts between the government and the Roman Catholic Church were regular during the period. Some of the artistic elite saw the Fin de siècle in a pessimistic light.

 
Art Nouveau style coffee service in Meissen Porcelain, by Theodor Grust, 1902.

Those who were able to benefit from the prosperity of the era were drawn towards new forms of light entertainment during the Belle Époque, and the Parisian bourgeoisie, or the successful industrialists called the nouveaux riches, became increasingly influenced by the habits and fads of the city's elite social class, known popularly as Tout-Paris ("all of Paris", or "everyone in Paris").[6] The Casino de Paris opened in 1890. For Paris's less affluent public, entertainment was provided by cabarets, bistros and music halls.[7]

The Moulin Rouge cabaret is a Paris landmark still open for business today. The Folies Bergère was another landmark venue. Burlesque performance styles were more mainstream in Belle Époque Paris than in more staid cities of Europe and America. Liane de Pougy, dancer, socialite and courtesan, was well known in Paris as a headline performer at top cabarets. Belle Époque dancers and singers such as Polaire, Mistinguett, Paulus, Eugénie Fougère, La Goulue and Jane Avril were Paris celebrities, some of whom modelled for Toulouse-Lautrec's iconic poster art. The Can-can dance was a popular 19th-century cabaret style that appears in Toulouse-Lautrec's posters from the era.

 
A 1900 cartoon by Jan Duch from the magazine Le Frou Frou satirising a Parisian style trend favouring small breasts ("Is she ridiculous, this woman, with her enormous bosom?" "It seems that it is still going in the provinces.").[8]

The Eiffel Tower, built to serve as the grand entrance to the 1889 World's Fair held in Paris, became the accustomed symbol of the city, to its inhabitants and to visitors from around the world. Paris hosted another successful World's Fair in 1900, the Exposition Universelle. Paris had been profoundly changed by the Second Empire reforms to the city's architecture and public amenities. Haussmann's renovation of Paris changed its housing, street layouts, and green spaces. The walkable neighbourhoods were well-established by the Belle Époque.

Cheap coal and cheap labour contributed to the cult of the orchid[9] and made possible the perfection of fruits grown under glass, as the apparatus of state dinners extended to the upper classes. Exotic feathers and furs were more prominently featured in fashion than ever before, as haute couture was invented in Paris, the center of the Belle Époque, where fashion began to move in a yearly cycle. In Paris, restaurants such as Maxim's Paris achieved a new splendor and cachet as places for the rich to parade. Maxim's Paris was arguably the city's most exclusive restaurant. Bohemian lifestyles gained a different glamour, pursued in the cabarets of Montmartre.

Large public buildings such as the Opéra Garnier devoted enormous spaces to interior designs as Art Nouveau show places. After the mid-19th century, railways linked all the major cities of Europe to spa towns like Biarritz, Deauville, Vichy, Arcachon and the French Riviera. Their carriages were rigorously divided into first-class and second-class, but the super-rich now began to commission private railway coaches, as exclusivity as well as display was a hallmark of opulent luxury.

Politics

 
Europe during the Belle Époque (1911).

The years between the Franco-Prussian War and World War I were characterised by unusual political stability in Western and Central Europe. Although tensions between France and Germany persisted as a result of the French loss of Alsace-Lorraine to Germany in 1871, a series of diplomatic conferences managed to mediate disputes that threatened the general peace: the Congress of Berlin in 1878, the Berlin Congo Conference in 1884, and the Algeciras Conference in 1906. Indeed, for many Europeans during the Belle Époque, transnational, class-based affiliations were as important as national identities, particularly among aristocrats. An upper-class gentleman could travel through much of Western Europe without a passport and even reside abroad with minimal bureaucratic regulation.[10] World War I, mass transportation, the spread of literacy, and various citizenship concerns changed this.

The Belle Époque featured a class structure that ensured cheap labour. The Paris Métro underground railway system joined the omnibus and streetcar in transporting the working population, including those servants who did not live in the wealthy centers of cities. One result of this commuting was suburbanisation allowing working-class and upper-class neighbourhoods to be separated by large distances.

 
A newspaper headline for Émile Zola's open letter to the French government and the country, condemning the treatment of Captain Alfred Dreyfus during the Dreyfus affair

Meanwhile, the international workers' movement also reorganised itself and reinforced pan-European, class-based identities among the classes whose labour supported the Belle Époque. The most notable transnational socialist organisation was the Second International. Anarchists of different affiliations were active during the period leading up to World War I. Political assassinations and assassination attempts were still rare in France (unlike in Russia) but there were some notable exceptions, including the killing of President Marie François Sadi Carnot in 1894. A bomb was detonated in the Chamber of Deputies of France in 1893, causing injuries but no deaths. Terrorism against civilians also occurred in 1894, perpetrated by Émile Henry, who killed a cafe patron and wounded several others.

France enjoyed relative political stability at home during the Belle Époque. The sudden death of President Félix Faure while in office took the country by surprise, but had no destabilising effect on the government. The most serious political issue to face the country during this period was the Dreyfus affair. Captain Alfred Dreyfus was wrongly convicted of treason, with fabricated evidence from French government officials. Antisemitism directed at Dreyfus, and tolerated by the general French public in everyday society, was a central issue in the controversy and the court trials that followed. Public debate surrounding the Dreyfus Affair grew to an uproar after the publication of J'Accuse…!, an open letter sent to newspapers by prominent novelist Émile Zola, condemning government corruption and French antisemitism. The Dreyfus affair consumed the interest of the French for several years and it received heavy newspaper coverage.

European politics saw very few regime changes, the major exception being Portugal, which experienced a republican revolution in 1910. However, tensions between working-class socialist parties, bourgeois liberal parties, and landed or aristocratic conservative parties did increase in many countries, and it has been claimed that profound political instability belied the calm surface of European politics in the era.[11] In fact, militarism and international tensions grew considerably between 1897 and 1914, and the immediate prewar years were marked by a general armaments competition in Europe. Additionally, this era was one of massive overseas colonialism, known as the New Imperialism. The most famous portion of this imperial expansion was the Scramble for Africa.

Conflicts and wars
 
The pith helmet is an icon of colonialism in the tropical areas of the planet.
 
World Empires 1900. British Empire (pink) is the most powerful in the world at this time, thanks to the dominance of the Royal Navy, among other reasons.

Most of the great powers (and some minor ones such as Belgium, the Netherlands, or Denmark) became involved in imperialism, building their own overseas empires especially in Africa and Asia. Although there were numerous revolutions, civil wars and colonial insurrections, the most notable are: the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), the War of the Pacific (1879–1884), two Boer Wars (1880–1881 and 1899–1902), the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895), the First Italo-Ethiopian War (1895–1896), the Greco-Turkish War (1897), the Spanish-American War (1898), the Philippine-American War (1899–1902), the Russo-Japanese War (1905), and the Italo-Turkish War (1911–1912).

The First Balkan War (1912–1913) and the Second Balkan War (1913) are considered prologues to the First World War (1914–1918), whose level of material and human destruction at the industrial level marks the end of the Belle Époque.

There were also notable diplomatic conflicts that could provoke world wars such as the 1890 British Ultimatum, the Fashoda Incident (1898), the First Moroccan Crisis (1905-1906), and the Second Moroccan Crisis (1911).

Science and technology

 
Peugeot Type 3 built in France in 1891
 
A telegraph used to transmit messages in morse code.
 
The sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912 is the best-known tragedy of the era.
 
The Wright Flyer: the first sustained flight with a powered, controlled aircraft (1903).
 
The world's first movie poster, for the comedy L'Arroseur Arrosé, 1895

The Belle Époque was an era of great scientific and technological advancement in Europe and the world in general. Inventions of the Second Industrial Revolution that became generally common in this era include the perfection of lightly sprung, noiseless carriages in a multitude of new fashionable forms, which were superseded towards the end of the era by the automobile, which was for its first decade a luxurious experiment for the well-heeled.[12] French automobile manufacturers such as Peugeot were already pioneers in carriage manufacturing. Edouard Michelin invented removable pneumatic tires for bicycles and automobiles in the 1890s. The scooter and moped are also Belle Époque inventions.

A number of French inventors patented products with a lasting impact on modern society. After the telephone joined the telegraph as a vehicle for rapid communication, French inventor Édouard Belin developed the Belinograph, or Wirephoto, to transmit photos by telephone. The electric light began to supersede gas lighting, and neon lights were invented in France.

France was a leader of early cinema technology. The cinématographe was invented in France by Léon Bouly and put to use by Auguste and Louis Lumière, brothers who held the first film screenings in the world. The Lumière brothers made many other innovations in cinematography. It was during this era that the motion pictures were developed, though these did not become common until after World War I.

Although the aeroplane remained a fascinating experiment, France was a leader in aviation. France established the world's first national air force in 1910. Two French inventors, Louis Breguet and Paul Cornu, made independent experiments with the first flying helicopters in 1907.

Henri Becquerel discovered radioactivity in 1896 while working with phosphorescent materials. His work confirmed and explained earlier observations regarding uranium salts by Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor in 1857.

It was during this era that biologists and physicians finally came to understand the germ theory of disease, and the field of bacteriology was established. Louis Pasteur was perhaps the most famous scientist in France during this time. Pasteur developed pasteurisation and a rabies vaccine. Mathematician and physicist Henri Poincaré made important contributions to pure and applied mathematics, and also published books for the general public on mathematical and scientific subjects. Marie Skłodowska-Curie worked in France, winning the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903, and the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1911. Physicist Gabriel Lippmann invented integral imaging, still in use today.

Art and literature

 
Auguste Renoir, Bal du moulin de la Galette, 1876, oil on canvas, 131 × 175 cm, Musée d'Orsay
 
Year 2000 video telephony as imagined in France in 1910

In 1890, Vincent van Gogh died. It was during the 1890s that his paintings achieved the admiration denied them during Van Gogh's life; first among other artists, then gradually among the public. Reactions against the ideals of the Impressionists characterised visual arts in Paris during the Belle Époque. Among the post-Impressionist movements in Paris were the Nabis, the Salon de la Rose + Croix, the Symbolist movement (also in poetry, music, and visual art), Fauvism, and early Modernism. Between 1900 and 1914, Expressionism took hold of many artists in Paris and Vienna. Early works of Cubism and Abstraction were exhibited. Foreign influences were being strongly felt in Paris as well. The official art school in Paris, the École des Beaux-Arts, held an exhibition of Japanese printmaking that changed approaches to graphic design, particular posters and book illustration (Aubrey Beardsley was influenced by a similar exhibit when he visited Paris during the 1890s). Exhibits of African tribal art also captured the imagination of Parisian artists at the turn of the 20th century.

Art Nouveau is the most popularly recognised art movement to emerge from the period. This largely decorative style (Jugendstil in central Europe), characterised by its curvilinear forms, and nature-inspired motifs became prominent from the mid-1890s and dominated progressive design throughout much of Europe. Its use in public art in Paris, such as Hector Guimard's Paris Métro stations, has made it synonymous with the city.

Prominent artists in Paris during the Belle Époque included post-Impressionists such as Odilon Redon, Gustave Moreau, Maurice Denis, Pierre Bonnard, Édouard Vuillard, Paul Gauguin, Henri Matisse, Émile Bernard, Henri Rousseau, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (whose reputation improved substantially after his death), Giuseppe Amisani, and a young Pablo Picasso. More modern forms in sculpture also began to dominate as in the works of Paris-native Auguste Rodin.

 
Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907), Museum of Modern Art, New York

Although Impressionism in painting began well before the Belle Époque, it had initially been met with scepticism if not outright scorn by a public accustomed to the realist and representational art approved by the Academy. In 1890, Monet started his series Haystacks. Impressionism, which had been considered the artistic avant-garde in the 1860s, did not gain widespread acceptance until after World War I. The academic painting style, associated with the Academy of Art in Paris, remained the most respected style among the public in Paris. Artists who appealed to the Belle Époque public include William-Adolphe Bouguereau, the English Pre-Raphaelite's John William Waterhouse, and Lord Leighton and his depictions of idyllic Roman scenes. More progressive tastes patronised the Barbizon school plein-air painters. These painters were associates of the Pre-Raphaelites, who inspired a generation of aesthetic-minded "Souls".

Many successful examples of Art Nouveau, with notable regional variations, were built in France, Germany, Belgium, Spain, Austria (the Vienna Secession), Hungary, Bohemia, Serbia, and Latvia. It soon spread around the world, including Peru, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and the United States.

European literature underwent a major transformation during the Belle Époque. Literary realism and naturalism achieved new heights. Among the most famous French realist or naturalist authors are Guy de Maupassant and Émile Zola. Realism gradually developed into modernism, which emerged in the 1890s and came to dominate European literature during the Belle Époque's final years and throughout the interwar years. The Modernist classic In Search of Lost Time was begun by Marcel Proust in 1909, to be published after World War I. The works of German Thomas Mann had a huge impact in France as well, such as Death in Venice, published in 1912. Colette shocked France with the publication of the sexually frank Claudine novel series, and other works. Joris-Karl Huysmans, who came to prominence in the mid-1880s, continued experimenting with themes and styles that would be associated with Symbolism and the Decadent movement, mostly in his book à rebours. André Gide, Anatole France, Alain-Fournier, and Paul Bourget are among France's most popular fiction writers of the era.

 
A French poster from 1894 by Jules Chéret that captures the vibrant spirit of the Belle Époque.

Among poets, the Symbolists such as Charles Baudelaire remained at the forefront. Although Baudelaire's poetry collection Les Fleurs du mal had been published in the 1850s, it exerted a strong influence on the next generation of poets and artists. The Decadent movement fascinated Parisians, intrigued by Paul Verlaine and above all Arthur Rimbaud, who became the archetypal enfant terrible of France. Rimbaud's Illuminations was published in 1886, and subsequently his other works were also published, influencing Surrealists and Modernists during the Belle Époque and after. Rimbaud's poems were the first works of free verse seen by the French public. Free verse and typographic experimentation also emerged in Un coup de dés jamais n'abolira le hasard by Stéphane Mallarmé, anticipating Dada and concrete poetry. Guillaume Apollinaire's poetry introduced themes and imagery from modern life to readers. Cosmopolis: An International Monthly Review had a far-reaching impact on European writers, and ran editions in London, Paris, Saint Petersburg, and Berlin.

Paris's popular bourgeois theatre was dominated by the light farces of Georges Feydeau and cabaret performances. Theatre adopted new modern methods, including Expressionism, and many playwrights wrote plays that shocked contemporary audiences either with their frank depictions of everyday life and sexuality or with unusual artistic elements. Cabaret theatre also became popular.

Musically, the Belle Époque was characterised by salon music. This was not considered serious music but, rather, short pieces considered accessible to a general audience. In addition to works for piano solo or violin and piano, the Belle Époque was famous for its large repertory of songs (mélodies, romanze, etc.). The Italians were the greatest proponents of this type of song, its greatest champion being Francesco Paolo Tosti. Though Tosti's songs never completely left the repertoire, salon music generally fell into a period of obscurity. Even as encores, singers were afraid to sing them at serious recitals. In that period, waltzes also flourished. Operettas were also at the peak of their popularity, with composers such as Johann Strauss III, Emmerich Kálmán, and Franz Lehár. Many Belle Époque composers working in Paris are still popular today: Igor Stravinsky, Erik Satie, Claude Debussy, Lili Boulanger, Jules Massenet, César Franck, Camille Saint-Saëns, Gabriel Fauré and his pupil, Maurice Ravel.[13] According to Fauré and Ravel, the favoured composer of the Belle Époch was Edvard Grieg, who enjoyed the height of his popularity in both Parisian concert and salon life (despite his stance on the accused in the Dreyfus affair). Ravel and Delius agreed that French music of this time was simply "Edvard Grieg plus the third act of Tristan".[14]

Modern dance began to emerge as a powerful artistic development in theatre. Dancer Loie Fuller appeared at popular venues such as the Folies Bergère, and took her eclectic performance style abroad as well. Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes brought fame to Vaslav Nijinsky and established modern ballet technique. The Ballets Russes launched several ballet masterpieces, including The Firebird and The Rite of Spring (sometimes causing audience riots at the same time).

Belle Époque by country

 
Map of the Colonial Empires (and their colonies) in the year 1885, when after the Berlin Conference of that year the Partition of Africa between the colonial powers began.
 
Flag-map of the world (1900).
 
Flag-map of the world (1914), just before the start of World War I (1914–1918), which ended the stage of the Belle Époque.

Africa

Americas

Asia

Europe

Oceania

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Palmer, Robert Roswell (20 September 2013). A history of Europe in the modern world. Colton, Joel, Kramer, Lloyd S. (11th ed.). New York, NY. ISBN 978-0076632855. OCLC 882719311.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Julie Des Jardins (October 2011). "Madame Curie's Passion". Smithsonian Magazine. from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  3. ^ Reader, K. (2020). The Marais: The Story of a Quartier. United Kingdom: Liverpool University Press.p.74
  4. ^ Shaw, M. (2015). War and Genocide: Organised Killing in Modern Society. Germany: Wiley. p.10
  5. ^ Martin, B. F. (1999). The Hypocrisy of Justice in the Belle Epoque. United States: LSU Press. passim.
  6. ^ Martin-Fugier, Anne (1993). La vie élégante ou La formation du Tout-Paris : 1815-1848. Paris: Seuil. ISBN 2-02-018218-1. OCLC 34960131.
  7. ^ Isherwood, Robert M. (1981). "Entertainment in the Parisian Fairs in the Eighteenth Century". The Journal of Modern History. 53 (1): 24–48. doi:10.1086/242240. ISSN 0022-2801. JSTOR 1877063. S2CID 144101254.
  8. ^ Source: Le Frou Frou 1900 Page 128
  9. ^ "Incontestably the favorite flowers of the Belle Époque were orchids and Calla," (Gabriele Fahr-Becker, Art Nouveau 2007, p. 112; the fashion for orchids is narrated in Eric Hansen, Orchid Fever: A Horticultural Tale of Love, Lust, and Lunacy, 2000.
  10. ^ A. J. P. Taylor, English History 1914–1945, and The Struggle for Mastery in Europe, 1848–1918
  11. ^ Arno J. Mayer, The Persistence of the Old Regime: Europe to the Great War
  12. ^ The first Ford Model T, a car for the masses, rolled off the assembly line in 1908.
  13. ^ Mario d'Angelo (2013) La musique à la Belle Époque. Paris: Éditions du Manuscrit.
  14. ^ Nectoux, Jean-Michel (2009). "Grieg. The Paris Stay of 1903" (PDF). Griegsociety.com.

Further reading

  • Beal, Sophia. "The substance of light: Literature and public space in belle époque Rio de Janeiro (1894–1914)." Luso-Brazilian Review 49.2 (2012): 5-27.
  • Bergeron, Katherine. Voice lessons: French mélodie in the belle epoque (Oxford University Press, 2010) online
  • Berlanstein, Lenard R. "Ready for progress? Opinion surveys on women's roles and opportunities in Belle Epoque France." French Politics, Culture and Society 27#1 (2009), p. 1+. online
  • Bruna, D. Fashioning the body: An intimate history of the silhouette. (Yale University Press, 2015 ).
  • Caddy, Davinia. The Ballets Russes and Beyond: Music and Dance in Belle-Époque Paris (Cambridge University Press, 2012).
  • Deneckere, Gita, Daniel Laqua, and Christophe Verbruggen. "Belgium on the move: transnational history and the Belle Epoque." Revue belge de Philologie et d'Histoire 90.4 (2012): 1213-1226. online
  • Epstein, Anne R. "Gender and the rise of the female expert during the Belle Époque." Histoire@ politique 014 (2011): 84-96. online
  • Gournay, Isabelle, and Marie-Laure Crosnier Leconte. "American Architecture Students in Belle Epoque Paris: Scholastic Strategies and Achievements at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts." Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 12.2 (2013): 154-198. online
  • Holmes, Diana, and Carrie Tarr, eds. A "Belle Epoque"? Women in French Society and Culture 1890–1914 (Berghahn Books, 2006).
  • Kalifa, Dominique. The Belle Époque: A Cultural History, Paris and Beyond (Columbia University Press, 2021).
  • La Belle Époque. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1982. ISBN 0870993291.
  • McAuliffe, Mary. Dawn of the Belle Époque: The Paris of Monet, Zola, Bernhardt, Eiffel, Debussy, Clemenceau, and Their Friends (Rowman & Littlefield, 2011).
    • McAuliffe, Mary. Twilight of the Belle Epoque: The Paris of Picasso, Stravinsky, Proust, Renault, Marie Curie, Gertrude Stein, and Their Friends Through the Great War (Rowman & Littlefield, 2014) online.
  • Mesch, Rachel. Having It All in the Belle Epoque: How French Women's Magazines Invented the Modern Woman (Stanford University Press, 2020).
  • Mostyn, Trevor. Egypt's Belle Époque: Cairo and the Age of the Hedonists, (Tauris Parke, 2006).
  • Myntti, Cynthia. Paris Along the Nile: Architecture in Cairo from the Belle époque (American University in Cairo Press, 2014).
  • Rayward, W. Boyd, ed. Information beyond borders: international cultural and intellectual exchange in the belle epoque (Routledge, 2016) online.
  • Reynolds, Sian. Paris-Edinburgh: cultural connections in the Belle Epoque (Ashgate, 2013).
  • Roberts, Mary Louise. Disruptive Acts: The New Woman in Fin-de-Siecle France (U of Chicago Press, 2002).
  • Rogers, Juliette M. Career Stories: Belle Epoque Novels of Professional Development (Penn State Press, 2016). online
  • Rudorff, Raymond. Belle Epoque: Paris in the 1890s (Hamish Hamilton, 1972).
  • Wilcox, C. Fashion in detail 1700–2000. (V & A. 2013).
  • Wires, Richard. "Paris: La Belle Époque". Conspectus of History 1.4 (1977): 60–72.
  • Younis, Musab. "‘United by blood’: race and transnationalism during the Belle Époque." Nations and Nationalism 23.3 (2017): 484-504. online

External links

  • The Belle Époque in Europe – many pictures of Art Nouveau architecture (in German, English, French, and Italian)
  • Paris1900.lartnouveau.com – The Belle Époque in Paris through postcards and documents
  • Dijon1900.blogspot.com – The Belle Époque in Dijon through postcards

belle, Époque, other, uses, disambiguation, also, concert, europe, french, bɛlepɔk, french, beautiful, epoch, period, french, belgian, european, history, usually, considered, begin, around, 1871, 1880, with, outbreak, world, 1914, occurring, during, third, fre. For other uses see Belle Epoque disambiguation See also Concert of Europe The Belle Epoque or La Belle Epoque French bɛlepɔk French for Beautiful Epoch is a period of French Belgian and European history usually considered to begin around 1871 1880 and to end with the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Occurring during the era of the Third French Republic it was a period characterised by optimism regional peace economic prosperity colonial expansion and technological scientific and cultural innovations In this era of France s cultural and artistic climate particularly within Paris the arts markedly flourished and numerous masterpieces of literature music theatre and visual art gained extensive recognition Belle Epoque1871 1880 1914World Fair of 1900 in Paris FranceIncludingRevanchismScramble for AfricaDreyfus affairStart of World War ILeader s Patrice de MacMahon Jules Grevy Jules Ferry Sadi Carnot Georges Boulanger Raymond PoincareChronology Age of Romanticism Second Republic and Second Empire World War I Interwar France Annees follesThe Belle Epoque was so named in retrospect when it began to be considered a continental European Golden Age in contrast to the horrors of the Napoleonic Wars and World War I The Belle Epoque was a period in which according to historian R R Palmer European civilisation achieved its greatest power in global politics and also exerted its maximum influence upon peoples outside Europe 1 Contents 1 Popular culture and fashions 2 Politics 3 Science and technology 4 Art and literature 5 Belle Epoque by country 5 1 Africa 5 2 Americas 5 3 Asia 5 4 Europe 5 5 Oceania 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksPopular culture and fashions Edit Grand foyer of the Folies Bergere cabaretTwo devastating world wars and their aftermath made the Belle Epoque appear to be a time of joie de vivre joy of living in contrast to 20th century hardships It was also a period of stability that France enjoyed after the tumult of the early years of the Third Republic featuring defeat in the Franco Prussian War the uprising of the Paris Commune and the fall of General Georges Ernest Boulanger The defeat of Boulanger and the celebrations tied to the 1889 World s Fair in Paris launched an era of optimism and affluence French imperialism was in its prime It was a cultural center of global influence its educational scientific and medical institutions were at the leading edge of Europe 2 It was not entirely the reality of life in Paris or in France however France had a large economic underclass who never experienced much of the Belle Epoque s wonders and entertainments 3 Poverty remained endemic in Paris s urban slums and rural peasantry for decades after the Belle Epoque ended 4 5 Conflicts between the government and the Roman Catholic Church were regular during the period Some of the artistic elite saw the Fin de siecle in a pessimistic light Art Nouveau style coffee service in Meissen Porcelain by Theodor Grust 1902 Those who were able to benefit from the prosperity of the era were drawn towards new forms of light entertainment during the Belle Epoque and the Parisian bourgeoisie or the successful industrialists called the nouveaux riches became increasingly influenced by the habits and fads of the city s elite social class known popularly as Tout Paris all of Paris or everyone in Paris 6 The Casino de Paris opened in 1890 For Paris s less affluent public entertainment was provided by cabarets bistros and music halls 7 The Moulin Rouge cabaret is a Paris landmark still open for business today The Folies Bergere was another landmark venue Burlesque performance styles were more mainstream in Belle Epoque Paris than in more staid cities of Europe and America Liane de Pougy dancer socialite and courtesan was well known in Paris as a headline performer at top cabarets Belle Epoque dancers and singers such as Polaire Mistinguett Paulus Eugenie Fougere La Goulue and Jane Avril were Paris celebrities some of whom modelled for Toulouse Lautrec s iconic poster art The Can can dance was a popular 19th century cabaret style that appears in Toulouse Lautrec s posters from the era A 1900 cartoon by Jan Duch from the magazine Le Frou Frou satirising a Parisian style trend favouring small breasts Is she ridiculous this woman with her enormous bosom It seems that it is still going in the provinces 8 The Eiffel Tower built to serve as the grand entrance to the 1889 World s Fair held in Paris became the accustomed symbol of the city to its inhabitants and to visitors from around the world Paris hosted another successful World s Fair in 1900 the Exposition Universelle Paris had been profoundly changed by the Second Empire reforms to the city s architecture and public amenities Haussmann s renovation of Paris changed its housing street layouts and green spaces The walkable neighbourhoods were well established by the Belle Epoque Cheap coal and cheap labour contributed to the cult of the orchid 9 and made possible the perfection of fruits grown under glass as the apparatus of state dinners extended to the upper classes Exotic feathers and furs were more prominently featured in fashion than ever before as haute couture was invented in Paris the center of the Belle Epoque where fashion began to move in a yearly cycle In Paris restaurants such as Maxim s Paris achieved a new splendor and cachet as places for the rich to parade Maxim s Paris was arguably the city s most exclusive restaurant Bohemian lifestyles gained a different glamour pursued in the cabarets of Montmartre Large public buildings such as the Opera Garnier devoted enormous spaces to interior designs as Art Nouveau show places After the mid 19th century railways linked all the major cities of Europe to spa towns like Biarritz Deauville Vichy Arcachon and the French Riviera Their carriages were rigorously divided into first class and second class but the super rich now began to commission private railway coaches as exclusivity as well as display was a hallmark of opulent luxury Politics Edit Europe during the Belle Epoque 1911 The years between the Franco Prussian War and World War I were characterised by unusual political stability in Western and Central Europe Although tensions between France and Germany persisted as a result of the French loss of Alsace Lorraine to Germany in 1871 a series of diplomatic conferences managed to mediate disputes that threatened the general peace the Congress of Berlin in 1878 the Berlin Congo Conference in 1884 and the Algeciras Conference in 1906 Indeed for many Europeans during the Belle Epoque transnational class based affiliations were as important as national identities particularly among aristocrats An upper class gentleman could travel through much of Western Europe without a passport and even reside abroad with minimal bureaucratic regulation 10 World War I mass transportation the spread of literacy and various citizenship concerns changed this The Belle Epoque featured a class structure that ensured cheap labour The Paris Metro underground railway system joined the omnibus and streetcar in transporting the working population including those servants who did not live in the wealthy centers of cities One result of this commuting was suburbanisation allowing working class and upper class neighbourhoods to be separated by large distances A newspaper headline for Emile Zola s open letter to the French government and the country condemning the treatment of Captain Alfred Dreyfus during the Dreyfus affairMeanwhile the international workers movement also reorganised itself and reinforced pan European class based identities among the classes whose labour supported the Belle Epoque The most notable transnational socialist organisation was the Second International Anarchists of different affiliations were active during the period leading up to World War I Political assassinations and assassination attempts were still rare in France unlike in Russia but there were some notable exceptions including the killing of President Marie Francois Sadi Carnot in 1894 A bomb was detonated in the Chamber of Deputies of France in 1893 causing injuries but no deaths Terrorism against civilians also occurred in 1894 perpetrated by Emile Henry who killed a cafe patron and wounded several others France enjoyed relative political stability at home during the Belle Epoque The sudden death of President Felix Faure while in office took the country by surprise but had no destabilising effect on the government The most serious political issue to face the country during this period was the Dreyfus affair Captain Alfred Dreyfus was wrongly convicted of treason with fabricated evidence from French government officials Antisemitism directed at Dreyfus and tolerated by the general French public in everyday society was a central issue in the controversy and the court trials that followed Public debate surrounding the Dreyfus Affair grew to an uproar after the publication of J Accuse an open letter sent to newspapers by prominent novelist Emile Zola condemning government corruption and French antisemitism The Dreyfus affair consumed the interest of the French for several years and it received heavy newspaper coverage European politics saw very few regime changes the major exception being Portugal which experienced a republican revolution in 1910 However tensions between working class socialist parties bourgeois liberal parties and landed or aristocratic conservative parties did increase in many countries and it has been claimed that profound political instability belied the calm surface of European politics in the era 11 In fact militarism and international tensions grew considerably between 1897 and 1914 and the immediate prewar years were marked by a general armaments competition in Europe Additionally this era was one of massive overseas colonialism known as the New Imperialism The most famous portion of this imperial expansion was the Scramble for Africa Conflicts and warsMain article International relations 1814 1919 The pith helmet is an icon of colonialism in the tropical areas of the planet World Empires 1900 British Empire pink is the most powerful in the world at this time thanks to the dominance of the Royal Navy among other reasons Most of the great powers and some minor ones such as Belgium the Netherlands or Denmark became involved in imperialism building their own overseas empires especially in Africa and Asia Although there were numerous revolutions civil wars and colonial insurrections the most notable are the Franco Prussian War 1870 1871 the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 two Boer Wars 1880 1881 and 1899 1902 the First Sino Japanese War 1894 1895 the First Italo Ethiopian War 1895 1896 the Greco Turkish War 1897 the Spanish American War 1898 the Philippine American War 1899 1902 the Russo Japanese War 1905 and the Italo Turkish War 1911 1912 The First Balkan War 1912 1913 and the Second Balkan War 1913 are considered prologues to the First World War 1914 1918 whose level of material and human destruction at the industrial level marks the end of the Belle Epoque There were also notable diplomatic conflicts that could provoke world wars such as the 1890 British Ultimatum the Fashoda Incident 1898 the First Moroccan Crisis 1905 1906 and the Second Moroccan Crisis 1911 Science and technology Edit Peugeot Type 3 built in France in 1891 A telegraph used to transmit messages in morse code The sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912 is the best known tragedy of the era The Wright Flyer the first sustained flight with a powered controlled aircraft 1903 The world s first movie poster for the comedy L Arroseur Arrose 1895The Belle Epoque was an era of great scientific and technological advancement in Europe and the world in general Inventions of the Second Industrial Revolution that became generally common in this era include the perfection of lightly sprung noiseless carriages in a multitude of new fashionable forms which were superseded towards the end of the era by the automobile which was for its first decade a luxurious experiment for the well heeled 12 French automobile manufacturers such as Peugeot were already pioneers in carriage manufacturing Edouard Michelin invented removable pneumatic tires for bicycles and automobiles in the 1890s The scooter and moped are also Belle Epoque inventions A number of French inventors patented products with a lasting impact on modern society After the telephone joined the telegraph as a vehicle for rapid communication French inventor Edouard Belin developed the Belinograph or Wirephoto to transmit photos by telephone The electric light began to supersede gas lighting and neon lights were invented in France France was a leader of early cinema technology The cinematographe was invented in France by Leon Bouly and put to use by Auguste and Louis Lumiere brothers who held the first film screenings in the world The Lumiere brothers made many other innovations in cinematography It was during this era that the motion pictures were developed though these did not become common until after World War I Although the aeroplane remained a fascinating experiment France was a leader in aviation France established the world s first national air force in 1910 Two French inventors Louis Breguet and Paul Cornu made independent experiments with the first flying helicopters in 1907 Henri Becquerel discovered radioactivity in 1896 while working with phosphorescent materials His work confirmed and explained earlier observations regarding uranium salts by Abel Niepce de Saint Victor in 1857 It was during this era that biologists and physicians finally came to understand the germ theory of disease and the field of bacteriology was established Louis Pasteur was perhaps the most famous scientist in France during this time Pasteur developed pasteurisation and a rabies vaccine Mathematician and physicist Henri Poincare made important contributions to pure and applied mathematics and also published books for the general public on mathematical and scientific subjects Marie Sklodowska Curie worked in France winning the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1903 and the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1911 Physicist Gabriel Lippmann invented integral imaging still in use today Art and literature Edit Auguste Renoir Bal du moulin de la Galette 1876 oil on canvas 131 175 cm Musee d Orsay Year 2000 video telephony as imagined in France in 1910In 1890 Vincent van Gogh died It was during the 1890s that his paintings achieved the admiration denied them during Van Gogh s life first among other artists then gradually among the public Reactions against the ideals of the Impressionists characterised visual arts in Paris during the Belle Epoque Among the post Impressionist movements in Paris were the Nabis the Salon de la Rose Croix the Symbolist movement also in poetry music and visual art Fauvism and early Modernism Between 1900 and 1914 Expressionism took hold of many artists in Paris and Vienna Early works of Cubism and Abstraction were exhibited Foreign influences were being strongly felt in Paris as well The official art school in Paris the Ecole des Beaux Arts held an exhibition of Japanese printmaking that changed approaches to graphic design particular posters and book illustration Aubrey Beardsley was influenced by a similar exhibit when he visited Paris during the 1890s Exhibits of African tribal art also captured the imagination of Parisian artists at the turn of the 20th century Art Nouveau is the most popularly recognised art movement to emerge from the period This largely decorative style Jugendstil in central Europe characterised by its curvilinear forms and nature inspired motifs became prominent from the mid 1890s and dominated progressive design throughout much of Europe Its use in public art in Paris such as Hector Guimard s Paris Metro stations has made it synonymous with the city Prominent artists in Paris during the Belle Epoque included post Impressionists such as Odilon Redon Gustave Moreau Maurice Denis Pierre Bonnard Edouard Vuillard Paul Gauguin Henri Matisse Emile Bernard Henri Rousseau Henri de Toulouse Lautrec whose reputation improved substantially after his death Giuseppe Amisani and a young Pablo Picasso More modern forms in sculpture also began to dominate as in the works of Paris native Auguste Rodin Picasso Les Demoiselles d Avignon 1907 Museum of Modern Art New YorkAlthough Impressionism in painting began well before the Belle Epoque it had initially been met with scepticism if not outright scorn by a public accustomed to the realist and representational art approved by the Academy In 1890 Monet started his series Haystacks Impressionism which had been considered the artistic avant garde in the 1860s did not gain widespread acceptance until after World War I The academic painting style associated with the Academy of Art in Paris remained the most respected style among the public in Paris Artists who appealed to the Belle Epoque public include William Adolphe Bouguereau the English Pre Raphaelite s John William Waterhouse and Lord Leighton and his depictions of idyllic Roman scenes More progressive tastes patronised the Barbizon school plein air painters These painters were associates of the Pre Raphaelites who inspired a generation of aesthetic minded Souls Many successful examples of Art Nouveau with notable regional variations were built in France Germany Belgium Spain Austria the Vienna Secession Hungary Bohemia Serbia and Latvia It soon spread around the world including Peru Brazil Argentina Mexico and the United States European literature underwent a major transformation during the Belle Epoque Literary realism and naturalism achieved new heights Among the most famous French realist or naturalist authors are Guy de Maupassant and Emile Zola Realism gradually developed into modernism which emerged in the 1890s and came to dominate European literature during the Belle Epoque s final years and throughout the interwar years The Modernist classic In Search of Lost Time was begun by Marcel Proust in 1909 to be published after World War I The works of German Thomas Mann had a huge impact in France as well such as Death in Venice published in 1912 Colette shocked France with the publication of the sexually frank Claudine novel series and other works Joris Karl Huysmans who came to prominence in the mid 1880s continued experimenting with themes and styles that would be associated with Symbolism and the Decadent movement mostly in his book a rebours Andre Gide Anatole France Alain Fournier and Paul Bourget are among France s most popular fiction writers of the era A French poster from 1894 by Jules Cheret that captures the vibrant spirit of the Belle Epoque Among poets the Symbolists such as Charles Baudelaire remained at the forefront Although Baudelaire s poetry collection Les Fleurs du mal had been published in the 1850s it exerted a strong influence on the next generation of poets and artists The Decadent movement fascinated Parisians intrigued by Paul Verlaine and above all Arthur Rimbaud who became the archetypal enfant terrible of France Rimbaud s Illuminations was published in 1886 and subsequently his other works were also published influencing Surrealists and Modernists during the Belle Epoque and after Rimbaud s poems were the first works of free verse seen by the French public Free verse and typographic experimentation also emerged in Un coup de des jamais n abolira le hasard by Stephane Mallarme anticipating Dada and concrete poetry Guillaume Apollinaire s poetry introduced themes and imagery from modern life to readers Cosmopolis An International Monthly Review had a far reaching impact on European writers and ran editions in London Paris Saint Petersburg and Berlin Paris s popular bourgeois theatre was dominated by the light farces of Georges Feydeau and cabaret performances Theatre adopted new modern methods including Expressionism and many playwrights wrote plays that shocked contemporary audiences either with their frank depictions of everyday life and sexuality or with unusual artistic elements Cabaret theatre also became popular Musically the Belle Epoque was characterised by salon music This was not considered serious music but rather short pieces considered accessible to a general audience In addition to works for piano solo or violin and piano the Belle Epoque was famous for its large repertory of songs melodies romanze etc The Italians were the greatest proponents of this type of song its greatest champion being Francesco Paolo Tosti Though Tosti s songs never completely left the repertoire salon music generally fell into a period of obscurity Even as encores singers were afraid to sing them at serious recitals In that period waltzes also flourished Operettas were also at the peak of their popularity with composers such as Johann Strauss III Emmerich Kalman and Franz Lehar Many Belle Epoque composers working in Paris are still popular today Igor Stravinsky Erik Satie Claude Debussy Lili Boulanger Jules Massenet Cesar Franck Camille Saint Saens Gabriel Faure and his pupil Maurice Ravel 13 According to Faure and Ravel the favoured composer of the Belle Epoch was Edvard Grieg who enjoyed the height of his popularity in both Parisian concert and salon life despite his stance on the accused in the Dreyfus affair Ravel and Delius agreed that French music of this time was simply Edvard Grieg plus the third act of Tristan 14 Modern dance began to emerge as a powerful artistic development in theatre Dancer Loie Fuller appeared at popular venues such as the Folies Bergere and took her eclectic performance style abroad as well Sergei Diaghilev s Ballets Russes brought fame to Vaslav Nijinsky and established modern ballet technique The Ballets Russes launched several ballet masterpieces including The Firebird and The Rite of Spring sometimes causing audience riots at the same time Belle Epoque by country Edit Map of the Colonial Empires and their colonies in the year 1885 when after the Berlin Conference of that year the Partition of Africa between the colonial powers began Flag map of the world 1900 Flag map of the world 1914 just before the start of World War I 1914 1918 which ended the stage of the Belle Epoque Africa Edit In Egypt with the reigns of Isma il Pasha Tewfik Pasha and Abbas II Helmy In Ethiopia with the reigns of Yohannes IV and Menelik II Americas Edit In Argentina with the period of the Generation of 80 In Brazil it began with the end of the Paraguayan War during the reign of Pedro II In Canada it coincided with the beginnings of Canadian Confederation In Chile it coincided with the Liberal Republic In Honduras it coincided with the Liberal Reform In Mexico the period was known as the Porfiriato In Peru with the period of the Aristocratic Republic In the United States emerging from the panic of 1873 ushering in the period known as Gilded Age and Progressive Era In Uruguay the period was known as Batllism Asia Edit In China with the reigns of Tongzhi Guangxu and the beginning of Puyi In Korea with the reign of Gojong In Japan with the reign of Meiji In Nepal with the reigns of Surendra Bikram Shah Prithvi Bir Bikram Shah and the beginning of Tribhuvan Bir Bikram Shah In Persia with the reigns of Naser al Din Shah Mozaffar ad Din Shah Mohammad Ali Shah and the beginning of Ahmad Shah In Thailand with the reign of Chulalongkorn and the beginning of Vajiravudh In Turkey with the reigns of Abdulaziz Murad V and the beginning of Abdul Hamid II Europe Edit In Austria Hungary with the reign of Franz Joseph I In Belgium with the reign of Leopold II and the beginning of Albert I In Bulgaria at the beginning of Ferdinand I In Denmark with the reigns of Christian IX and Frederick VIII In France with the French Third Republic In Germany it coincided with the reigns of William I Frederick III and Wilhelminism of Wilhelm II In Greece with the reign of George I In Italy with the reigns of Victor Emmanuel II Umberto I and the beginning of Victor Emmanuel III In Luxembourg with the reigns of Adolphe and William IV In Montenegro at the beginning of the reign of Nicholas I In the Netherlands with the reigns of William III and Wilhelmina In Portugal with the last period of the Kingdom of Portugal and the First Portuguese Republic In Romania with the reign of Carol I In Russia with the reign of Alexander III and the beginning of Nicholas II In Serbia with the reign of Peter I In Spain with the reigns of Alfonso XII and Alfonso XIII In Sweden Norway with the reign of Oscar II In Switzerland it coincided with the beginnings of the Swiss federal state from 1848 In the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland with the Victorian era and Edwardian era In the Vatican with the reign of Pope Leo XIII and the beginning of Pope Pius X Oceania Edit In Australia it coincided with the period known as the Australian gold rushes In Hawaii with the reigns of Lunalilo Kalakaua and the beginning of Liliʻuokalani Gallery Edit Art Nouveau building in Paris by architect Jules Lavirotte sculptures by Jean Francois Larrive 1875 1928 La charmeuse de Serpents The Snake Charmer 1907 by Henri Rousseau Modern dance and modern stage lighting innovator Loie Fuller Jules Massenet and Jean Richepin the latter as Apollo Citharoedus authors of Le mage premiered at the Opera Comique in Paris on 16 March 1891 Autochrome Lumiere was invented in 1907 as a pioneering method for color photography Here the Giza pyramid complex photographed in 1914 See also EditParis in the Belle Epoque Paris architecture of the Belle Epoque Charles Ayrout Belle Epoque architect in Cairo Egypt Second Industrial Revolution Fin de siecle Gay Nineties Gilded Age Edwardian era Succes de scandale Annees follesNotes Edit Palmer Robert Roswell 20 September 2013 A history of Europe in the modern world Colton Joel Kramer Lloyd S 11th ed New York NY ISBN 978 0076632855 OCLC 882719311 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Julie Des Jardins October 2011 Madame Curie s Passion Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on 27 November 2012 Retrieved 11 September 2012 Reader K 2020 The Marais The Story of a Quartier United Kingdom Liverpool University Press p 74 Shaw M 2015 War and Genocide Organised Killing in Modern Society Germany Wiley p 10 Martin B F 1999 The Hypocrisy of Justice in the Belle Epoque United States LSU Press passim Martin Fugier Anne 1993 La vie elegante ou La formation du Tout Paris 1815 1848 Paris Seuil ISBN 2 02 018218 1 OCLC 34960131 Isherwood Robert M 1981 Entertainment in the Parisian Fairs in the Eighteenth Century The Journal of Modern History 53 1 24 48 doi 10 1086 242240 ISSN 0022 2801 JSTOR 1877063 S2CID 144101254 Source Le Frou Frou 1900 Page 128 Incontestably the favorite flowers of the Belle Epoque were orchids and Calla Gabriele Fahr Becker Art Nouveau 2007 p 112 the fashion for orchids is narrated in Eric Hansen Orchid Fever A Horticultural Tale of Love Lust and Lunacy 2000 A J P Taylor English History 1914 1945 and The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848 1918 Arno J Mayer The Persistence of the Old Regime Europe to the Great War The first Ford Model T a car for the masses rolled off the assembly line in 1908 Mario d Angelo 2013 La musique a la Belle Epoque Paris Editions du Manuscrit Nectoux Jean Michel 2009 Grieg The Paris Stay of 1903 PDF Griegsociety com Further reading EditBeal Sophia The substance of light Literature and public space in belle epoque Rio de Janeiro 1894 1914 Luso Brazilian Review 49 2 2012 5 27 Bergeron Katherine Voice lessons French melodie in the belle epoque Oxford University Press 2010 online Berlanstein Lenard R Ready for progress Opinion surveys on women s roles and opportunities in Belle Epoque France French Politics Culture and Society 27 1 2009 p 1 online Bruna D Fashioning the body An intimate history of the silhouette Yale University Press 2015 Caddy Davinia The Ballets Russes and Beyond Music and Dance in Belle Epoque Paris Cambridge University Press 2012 Deneckere Gita Daniel Laqua and Christophe Verbruggen Belgium on the move transnational history and the Belle Epoque Revue belge de Philologie et d Histoire 90 4 2012 1213 1226 online Epstein Anne R Gender and the rise of the female expert during the Belle Epoque Histoire politique 014 2011 84 96 online Gournay Isabelle and Marie Laure Crosnier Leconte American Architecture Students in Belle Epoque Paris Scholastic Strategies and Achievements at the Ecole des Beaux Arts Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 12 2 2013 154 198 online Holmes Diana and Carrie Tarr eds A Belle Epoque Women in French Society and Culture 1890 1914 Berghahn Books 2006 Kalifa Dominique The Belle Epoque A Cultural History Paris and Beyond Columbia University Press 2021 La Belle Epoque New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1982 ISBN 0870993291 McAuliffe Mary Dawn of the Belle Epoque The Paris of Monet Zola Bernhardt Eiffel Debussy Clemenceau and Their Friends Rowman amp Littlefield 2011 McAuliffe Mary Twilight of the Belle Epoque The Paris of Picasso Stravinsky Proust Renault Marie Curie Gertrude Stein and Their Friends Through the Great War Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 online Mesch Rachel Having It All in the Belle Epoque How French Women s Magazines Invented the Modern Woman Stanford University Press 2020 Mostyn Trevor Egypt s Belle Epoque Cairo and the Age of the Hedonists Tauris Parke 2006 Myntti Cynthia Paris Along the Nile Architecture in Cairo from the Belle epoque American University in Cairo Press 2014 Rayward W Boyd ed Information beyond borders international cultural and intellectual exchange in the belle epoque Routledge 2016 online Reynolds Sian Paris Edinburgh cultural connections in the Belle Epoque Ashgate 2013 Roberts Mary Louise Disruptive Acts The New Woman in Fin de Siecle France U of Chicago Press 2002 Rogers Juliette M Career Stories Belle Epoque Novels of Professional Development Penn State Press 2016 online Rudorff Raymond Belle Epoque Paris in the 1890s Hamish Hamilton 1972 Wilcox C Fashion in detail 1700 2000 V amp A 2013 Wires Richard Paris La Belle Epoque Conspectus of History 1 4 1977 60 72 Younis Musab United by blood race and transnationalism during the Belle Epoque Nations and Nationalism 23 3 2017 484 504 onlineExternal links Edit Look up Belle Epoque in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Belle Epoque in Europe many pictures of Art Nouveau architecture in German English French and Italian Paris1900 lartnouveau com The Belle Epoque in Paris through postcards and documents Dijon1900 blogspot com The Belle Epoque in Dijon through postcards French Actress Postcards Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belle Epoque amp oldid 1169073548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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