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Louis XIV Victory Monument

The Louis XIV Victory Monument was an elaborate trophy memorial celebrating the military and domestic successes of the early decades of Louis XIV's personal rule, primarily those during the Franco-Dutch War of 1672–1678, on the Place des Victoires (Victories' Square) in central Paris. It was designed and sculpted by Martin Desjardins between 1682 and 1686 on a commission by François d'Aubusson, Duke of La Feuillade. The monument's centerpiece, a colossal statue of Louis XIV crowned by an allegory of victory, was destroyed in 1792 during the French Revolution.[1] Significant other parts of the monument have been preserved and are now mostly kept at the Louvre.

Late-17th-century engraving of the monument and two of the three-columned lanterns

Together with the two triumphal arches, the Porte Saint-Denis (1672) and Porte Saint-Martin (1674), and echoing the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles (decorated 1680–1684), the Victory Monument marked the high point of public exaltation of Louis XIV's military glory and European dominance in the urban landscape of Paris, before the setbacks and exhaustion that would come later in his reign with the Nine Years' War and War of the Spanish Succession.[2]

Background Edit

 
Medal commemorating the monument's inauguration, by Joseph Roettiers and Jean Dollin (1686)

Prominent courtier François III d'Aubusson, Duke of La Feuillade planned the Place des Victoires as both a property development project and a celebration of Louis XIV following the Treaties of Nijmegen, which in the late 1670s had put an end to his previous career as a military leader. He formed the plan in 1681 and purchased part of the grounds in 1684, the rest being acquired for the same purpose by the City of Paris.[1] While not much is known about the details of the planning process, it is probable that Louis XIV's entourage, if not the king itself, was involved in the definition of its program of monarchical glorification, so that the monument eventually appears as a hybrid of private initiative and official project.[3]: 10  The iconographic program echoes that of the ceiling of the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles and includes several of the same episodes, even though the depictions on the Victory Monument make less systematic use of allegory.[3]: 31-32 

La Feuillade had previously ordered a marble statue of Louis XIV from Desjardins in 1679. He offered it to the king in 1683 and it was placed in the Versailles Orangerie in 1684, where it remains to this day after having been altered during the Revolution and subsequently restored by Jean-François Lorta [fr] in 1815–1816.[4] That statue served as an inspiration for that on the Victory Monument, even though the king's attire differs: ancient Roman in Versailles, versus coronation garb in Paris.

La Feuillade commissioned Desjardins to create the victory monument in 1682.[5] The monument was completed and inaugurated on 26 March 1686, even as the surrounding buildings were unfinished or not started yet.[1]

Description Edit

 
The square, monument, and four lanterns, by Adam Perelle (late 1680s / early 1690s)
 
Portrait of Martin Desjardins by Hyacinthe Rigaud in 1686, with the monument in the background, now at Versailles

Monument proper Edit

At the center of the square, the monument itself stood and consisted of three sections: a base with larger-than-life bronze statues of prisoners and military spoils; a square pedestal with four bronze reliefs commemorating specific events; and a colossal gilded statue of Louis XIV in coronation robe, trampling on Cerberus, with an allegory of Victory standing behind him on a globe and holding a laurel wreath above his head. The statue was more than four meters high, and the entire monument's total height was about 12 meters. The monument included numerous celebratory inscriptions,[3]: 28  including a main dedicace in Latin on the front which read Viro Immortali ("To the Immortal Man"), an unambiguous reference to Louis.[1]

Each of the four prisoners simultaneously evoked an age of life and a specific emotion, and was also widely understood to refer to a vanquished nation: youth / hope / Spain; adulthood / rebellion / Holland; middle age / grief / Brandenburg; and old age / despondency / the Holy Roman Empire. The link with European states, however, was not made entirely explicit.[3]: 24  Three of the figures were easy to identify as they represented France's main adversaries of the time, but the forth one, now understood as representing Brandenburg, has been misinterpreted variously in the past as the Duchy of Savoy[1] or the Ottoman Empire.[6] Between them were scattered broken weapons and military emblems, including an imperial ensign that anachronistically combines the SPQR motto of Ancient Rome with the double-headed eagle of the Holy Roman Empire.

Desjardins's relief plates on the pedestal commemorated four events viewed as particularly representative of Louis XIV's glory: on the front, an allegory of the Peace of Nijmegen of 1678–1679, with Louis XIV bringing Peace to Europe, the latter two represented as female allegories; on the rear, an idealized[3]: 18  depiction of Louis XIV accepting the excuses of Spain's ambassador on 24 March 1662, a noted episode in the history of precedence among European monarchies; and on the sides, two military actions in which La Feuillade had participated, the crossing of the Rhine of June 1672 and the Siege of Besançon of 1674. Desjardins was also commissioned to produce four circular medallions (tondi) in bronze for the base of the monument, but only two were eventually installed there while the other two were replaced by inscriptions: The Destruction of Heresy, referring to the Edict of Fontainebleau of 1685 that revoked the Edict of Nantes of 1598 and led to the expulsion of France's Protestants or Huguenots; and The Abolition of Duels, referring to Louis's various initiatives starting in 1662 and especially his ordinance of 1679 by which he attempted to put an end to duels as a form of private justice in the French nobility. Desjardins's other two medallions, on the Doge of Genoa and the Swedes in Germany, were reused in the side lanterns.[3]: 27 

Side lanterns and medallions Edit

Around the monument, on four points of the near-circular square, were monumental lanterns (French: fanaux), each of them made of three columns of colored marble holding a naval lamp and decorated with two garlands of three circular medallions each, thus six by lantern. These lanterns provided for the illumination of the square and monument at night. In practice, however, they were not all completed. Some of the medallions were only temporary ones made in stucco, and possibly no more than half of the total (i.e. a dozen) were produced in bronze. Aside from the two initially created by Desjardins for the central monument, the others medallions were created by Flemish sculptor Jean Regnault (or Arnould) and caster Pierre Le Nègre, based on drawings by Pierre Mignard.[3]: 29 

A contemporary engraving gives the following list for the themes of the 24 medallions: 1. Battle of Rocroi in 1643; 2. Restoration of military discipline (reform of 1665); 3. Dutch rescued in Münster, 1664 (actually 1665 during the Second Anglo-Dutch War); 4. Fight of Saint-Gotthard in Hungary, 1665 (actually 1664); 5. Tournai, Lille and C. taken in 1667 (during the War of Devolution; "C." may be either Courtrai or Charleroi); 6. Justice reform in 1667 (the Code Louis [fr]); 7. Pyramid erected in Rome in 1664 and torn down in 1668 (the Corsican Guard Affair); 8. Takeover of Maastricht in 1673; 9. Battle of Seneffe in 1674; 10. Victorious fights in Germany in 1674 and 1675; 11. Naval fight in Sicily, 1676 (presumably the Battle of Augusta); 12. Battle of Palermo, 1676; 13. Storming of Valenciennes, 1677; 14. Battle of Cassel, 1677; 15. Takeover of Cambrai, 1677; 16. Dutch fleet burnt at Tobago in America, 1676 (actually 1677); 17. Ghent taken in 1676; 18. Swedes reestablished in Germany, 1679 (by the Treaty of Fontainebleau); 19. [?] and Strasbourg returned on the same day, 1681 (during the War of the Reunions); 20. Capture of Luxembourg, 1684; 21. The Junction of the Two Seas (by the Canal du Midi in 1681); 22. Submission of Genoa, 1685 (Doge Francesco Maria Imperiale Lercari's visit to Versailles); 23. The seas freed from the pirates, 1685; 24. Ambassadors from Muscovy in 1668 (Pyotr Potemkin), 1681 (Pyotr Potemkin and Stefan Volkov) and 1685 (Semyon Erofeevich Almazov and Semyon Ippolitov), of Guinea in 1670 (Matteo Lopes, on behalf of the Kingdom of Allada), of Morocco and Fez in 1682 (Mohammad Temim, on behalf of Ismail Ibn Sharif), of Siam in 1684 (led by Bénigne Vachet [fr], preceding the grander embassy of 1686), and of Algiers in 1683 (Djiafar-Aga-Effendi, during the French-Algerian War).[7]: 135 

Reception Edit

 
Portrait of Martin Desjardins by Hyacinthe Rigaud in 1692, with his hand on the captive statue of Holland; now at the Louvre

The monument was generally well received on esthetic grounds and was widely considered Desjardins's major masterpiece. In the 1692 portrait of Desjardins submitted by Hyacinthe Rigaud for entry into the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture, the sitter was represented with his hand on the captive statue of Holland.[8]

At the same time, the entire project was criticized for the unrestrained adulation of Louis XIV and humiliation of fellow European nations that were inherent in the program. The March 1686 inauguration ceremony, complete with artillery salvos, military march, incense and genuflections, was considered way over the top by the Duke of Saint-Simon who attended it while a child and found it verging on cult.[1] François-Timoléon de Choisy similarly mocked the elevation of Louis to godlike status as a hubristic echo of pagan Roman emperor-worship.[9] Anonymous poems, pamphlets and caricatures were circulated both in France and abroad, lambasting the monument and not least the "immortal man" dedicace, which, by denying the monarch's mortality, put into question his responsibility before God.[2]: 161 

The offensive depiction of France's neighbors as vanquished captives did nothing to help French diplomacy, and was viewed several decades later as having possibly contributed to the kingdom's isolation.[2]: 160  A follow-up bombastic urban design project on a larger scale than the Place des Victoires, started in 1685 and intended to be named the Place de Nos Conquêtes, was sharply toned down in 1699 to a more domestically-focused Place Louis-le-Grand. That year, Louis XIV's senior official Louis Phélypeaux, comte de Pontchartrain specifically referred in a letter to the Académie des Inscriptions to the "reliefs, slaves, and inscriptions of the statue of the Place des Victoires" as the example not to follow while aiming at something "wise and reasonable" for the new square, now known as the Place Vendôme.[2]: 161 

Later history Edit

 
Altar baldachin of Sens Cathedral (1742), re-employing four of the lanterns' columns

The lanterns were permanently turned off in 1699, decommissioned by royal order in 1717, and dismantled in 1718. La Feuillade's son donated their twelve precious marble columns to the Theatines congregation of Paris, then established on what is now Quai Voltaire, for their unfinished church.[10] After his death in 1725 the Theatines, who were short of money, sold them to the Paris Foreign Missions Society, the Couvent de la Madeleine de Traisnel [fr], and Sens Cathedral.[11] The latter reemployed four of the columns for its alter baldachin, erected in 1742 under Archbishop Jean-Joseph Languet de Gergy on a design by Giovanni Niccolò Servandoni.[12][13]

In 1790, the statues of the captives, deemed an offense to the new spirit of freedom, were "liberated" and initially relocated at the Louvre Palace.[14] On 10 August 1792, during that day's insurrection, the monument's main statue was toppled to be melted into cannons. Parts of the decoration, including the four bronze reliefs, were salvaged by Alexandre Lenoir for his Musée des Monuments français.[15]

A temporary woodwork monument was erected to celebrate the insurrectionist victims of 10 August 1792, which in turn was removed during the Consulate. Napoleon then commissioned a bronze heroic statue of General Louis Desaix which was produced by Claude Dejoux and inaugurated in 1810. The nude sculpture was widely disliked and removed in 1814 before Napoleon's fall. Its metal was used for the new Equestrian statue of Henry IV by François-Frédéric Lemot, inaugurated on the Pont Neuf in 1818. A more permanent replacement was erected in 1822, namely an equestrian statue of Louis XIV by François Joseph Bosio. This monument bears no visual relationship with Desjardin's original, even though its program overlaps especially as the 1672 crossing of the Rhine is represented on one of Bosio's two bronze reliefs on the pedestal.

Meanwhile, the statues of the four captives were placed in 1804 in front of Les Invalides, where they remained until 1939. In 1960 their ownership was transferred to the Louvre, which in 1961 had them deposited in the Parc de Sceaux [fr] where they remained until 1992. In 1993, in the context of the museum's expansion known as the Grand Louvre project, they were transferred, together with other preserved parts of the monument, to their current location in the newly created Cour Puget, where they dominate the courtyard's lower section.[16]

Eleven bronze medallions are also preserved at the Louvre. The two that decorated the monument's basis became part of the museum's collections in 1836 after having been kept at the Musée des Monuments français:

Five medallions from the lanterns were purchased during the Revolution by King George III of Great Britain and donated by the UK to France in 1914:[15]

  • The Restoration of Military Discipline (1665), by Arnould
  • The Pyramid of the Corsicans in Rome (1668), by Arnould
  • Capture of a City, believed in the past to depict the Siege of Valenciennes (1676–1677), by Arnould
  • The Reestablishment of the Swedes in Germany (1679), by Desjardins[19]
  • The Submission of the Doge of Genoa (1685), by Desjardins[20]

The remaining four , all by Arnould, were acquired by the Louvre between 1980 and 2006:

  • The Victory of Saint Gotthard (1664)[21]
  • A second version of The Reestablishment of the Swedes in Germany, after Desjardins's was found not respectful enough of the Swedish monarchy
  • The Junction of the Two Seas (1681)
  • The Magnificent Buildings of Versailles (which does not appear in the 1686 engraving's list cited above)

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Jacques Hillairet (1963). Dictionnaire Historique des Rues de Paris. Vol. II. Paris: Editions de Minuit. p. 629-631.
  2. ^ a b c d Rochelle Ziskin (March 1994), "The Place de Nos Conquêtes and the Unraveling of the Myth of Louis XIV", The Art Bulletin, Taylor & Francis, 76:1 (1): 147–162, JSTOR 3046007
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Thomas W. Gaehtgens (2003). "La statue de Louis XIV et son programme iconographique". In Isabelle Dubois; Alexandre Gady; Hendrik Ziegler (eds.). Place des Victoires: Histoire, architecture, société. Paris: Les Editions de la MSH.
  4. ^ "Louis XIV – Martin Desjardins (1637?–1694) et Jean-François Lorta (1752–1837)". Catalogue des sculptures des jardins de Versailles et de Trianon.
  5. ^ Danielle Chadych; Dominique Leborgne (1999). Atlas de Paris : Evolution d'un paysage urbain. Paris: Parigramme. p. 66.
  6. ^ June Hargrove (1989). Les Statues de Paris. Antwerp/Paris: Fonds Mercator – Albin Michel. p. 12.
  7. ^ Jean Nagle (1989). "La ville de l'absolutisme triomphant : De François Ier à Louis XV". In Louis Bergeron (ed.). Paris : Genèse d'un Paysage. Paris: Picard. pp. 93–145.
  8. ^ "Martin van den Bogaert dit Desjardins (1640–1694)". Louvre.
  9. ^ Hervé Drévillon (2011). Les Rois Absolus 1629–1715. Paris: Belin. p. 443.
  10. ^ Julien de Gaulle (1839–1841). Nouvelle histoire de Paris et de ses environs. Paris: P. M. Pourrat frères.
  11. ^ Bernard Destutt de Tracy (1755). Remarques sur l'établissement des Théatins en France. p. 44.
  12. ^ "Cathédrale Saint-Etienne et son trésor". Musées Sens.
  13. ^ "Le baldaquin enfin révélé". L'Yonne Républicaine. 1 September 2010.
  14. ^ "Brève : Les captifs de Martin Desjardins à la place des Victoires". Forum Pradier.
  15. ^ a b Albert Vuaflart (1914), "Les Médaillons de la Place des Victoires", Les Musées de France, Paris: Longuet, 4
  16. ^ "Quatre captifs dits aussi quatre nations vaincues : L'Espagne, l'Empire, le Brandebourg et la Hollande, Martin van den Bogaert dit Martin Desjardins (1682–1685)". Ministère de la Culture / Histoire des Arts.
  17. ^ "Les Duels abolis". Louvre.
  18. ^ "L'Hérésie détruite ou la Révocation de l'Edit de Nantes (1685)". Louvre.
  19. ^ "Les Suédois rétablis en Allemagne (1679)". Louvre.
  20. ^ "La Soumission du doge de Gênes (15 mai 1685)". Louvre.
  21. ^ "Un médaillon de la place des Victoires entre au Louvre". Le Parisien. 5 December 2007.

louis, victory, monument, elaborate, trophy, memorial, celebrating, military, domestic, successes, early, decades, louis, personal, rule, primarily, those, during, franco, dutch, 1672, 1678, place, victoires, victories, square, central, paris, designed, sculpt. The Louis XIV Victory Monument was an elaborate trophy memorial celebrating the military and domestic successes of the early decades of Louis XIV s personal rule primarily those during the Franco Dutch War of 1672 1678 on the Place des Victoires Victories Square in central Paris It was designed and sculpted by Martin Desjardins between 1682 and 1686 on a commission by Francois d Aubusson Duke of La Feuillade The monument s centerpiece a colossal statue of Louis XIV crowned by an allegory of victory was destroyed in 1792 during the French Revolution 1 Significant other parts of the monument have been preserved and are now mostly kept at the Louvre Late 17th century engraving of the monument and two of the three columned lanternsTogether with the two triumphal arches the Porte Saint Denis 1672 and Porte Saint Martin 1674 and echoing the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles decorated 1680 1684 the Victory Monument marked the high point of public exaltation of Louis XIV s military glory and European dominance in the urban landscape of Paris before the setbacks and exhaustion that would come later in his reign with the Nine Years War and War of the Spanish Succession 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Description 2 1 Monument proper 2 2 Side lanterns and medallions 3 Reception 4 Later history 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 NotesBackground Edit nbsp Medal commemorating the monument s inauguration by Joseph Roettiers and Jean Dollin 1686 Prominent courtier Francois III d Aubusson Duke of La Feuillade planned the Place des Victoires as both a property development project and a celebration of Louis XIV following the Treaties of Nijmegen which in the late 1670s had put an end to his previous career as a military leader He formed the plan in 1681 and purchased part of the grounds in 1684 the rest being acquired for the same purpose by the City of Paris 1 While not much is known about the details of the planning process it is probable that Louis XIV s entourage if not the king itself was involved in the definition of its program of monarchical glorification so that the monument eventually appears as a hybrid of private initiative and official project 3 10 The iconographic program echoes that of the ceiling of the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles and includes several of the same episodes even though the depictions on the Victory Monument make less systematic use of allegory 3 31 32 La Feuillade had previously ordered a marble statue of Louis XIV from Desjardins in 1679 He offered it to the king in 1683 and it was placed in the Versailles Orangerie in 1684 where it remains to this day after having been altered during the Revolution and subsequently restored by Jean Francois Lorta fr in 1815 1816 4 That statue served as an inspiration for that on the Victory Monument even though the king s attire differs ancient Roman in Versailles versus coronation garb in Paris La Feuillade commissioned Desjardins to create the victory monument in 1682 5 The monument was completed and inaugurated on 26 March 1686 even as the surrounding buildings were unfinished or not started yet 1 Description Edit nbsp The square monument and four lanterns by Adam Perelle late 1680s early 1690s nbsp Portrait of Martin Desjardins by Hyacinthe Rigaud in 1686 with the monument in the background now at VersaillesMonument proper Edit At the center of the square the monument itself stood and consisted of three sections a base with larger than life bronze statues of prisoners and military spoils a square pedestal with four bronze reliefs commemorating specific events and a colossal gilded statue of Louis XIV in coronation robe trampling on Cerberus with an allegory of Victory standing behind him on a globe and holding a laurel wreath above his head The statue was more than four meters high and the entire monument s total height was about 12 meters The monument included numerous celebratory inscriptions 3 28 including a main dedicace in Latin on the front which read Viro Immortali To the Immortal Man an unambiguous reference to Louis 1 Each of the four prisoners simultaneously evoked an age of life and a specific emotion and was also widely understood to refer to a vanquished nation youth hope Spain adulthood rebellion Holland middle age grief Brandenburg and old age despondency the Holy Roman Empire The link with European states however was not made entirely explicit 3 24 Three of the figures were easy to identify as they represented France s main adversaries of the time but the forth one now understood as representing Brandenburg has been misinterpreted variously in the past as the Duchy of Savoy 1 or the Ottoman Empire 6 Between them were scattered broken weapons and military emblems including an imperial ensign that anachronistically combines the SPQR motto of Ancient Rome with the double headed eagle of the Holy Roman Empire Desjardins s relief plates on the pedestal commemorated four events viewed as particularly representative of Louis XIV s glory on the front an allegory of the Peace of Nijmegen of 1678 1679 with Louis XIV bringing Peace to Europe the latter two represented as female allegories on the rear an idealized 3 18 depiction of Louis XIV accepting the excuses of Spain s ambassador on 24 March 1662 a noted episode in the history of precedence among European monarchies and on the sides two military actions in which La Feuillade had participated the crossing of the Rhine of June 1672 and the Siege of Besancon of 1674 Desjardins was also commissioned to produce four circular medallions tondi in bronze for the base of the monument but only two were eventually installed there while the other two were replaced by inscriptions The Destruction of Heresy referring to the Edict of Fontainebleau of 1685 that revoked the Edict of Nantes of 1598 and led to the expulsion of France s Protestants or Huguenots and The Abolition of Duels referring to Louis s various initiatives starting in 1662 and especially his ordinance of 1679 by which he attempted to put an end to duels as a form of private justice in the French nobility Desjardins s other two medallions on the Doge of Genoa and the Swedes in Germany were reused in the side lanterns 3 27 Side lanterns and medallions Edit Around the monument on four points of the near circular square were monumental lanterns French fanaux each of them made of three columns of colored marble holding a naval lamp and decorated with two garlands of three circular medallions each thus six by lantern These lanterns provided for the illumination of the square and monument at night In practice however they were not all completed Some of the medallions were only temporary ones made in stucco and possibly no more than half of the total i e a dozen were produced in bronze Aside from the two initially created by Desjardins for the central monument the others medallions were created by Flemish sculptor Jean Regnault or Arnould and caster Pierre Le Negre based on drawings by Pierre Mignard 3 29 A contemporary engraving gives the following list for the themes of the 24 medallions 1 Battle of Rocroi in 1643 2 Restoration of military discipline reform of 1665 3 Dutch rescued in Munster 1664 actually 1665 during the Second Anglo Dutch War 4 Fight of Saint Gotthard in Hungary 1665 actually 1664 5 Tournai Lille and C taken in 1667 during the War of Devolution C may be either Courtrai or Charleroi 6 Justice reform in 1667 the Code Louis fr 7 Pyramid erected in Rome in 1664 and torn down in 1668 the Corsican Guard Affair 8 Takeover of Maastricht in 1673 9 Battle of Seneffe in 1674 10 Victorious fights in Germany in 1674 and 1675 11 Naval fight in Sicily 1676 presumably the Battle of Augusta 12 Battle of Palermo 1676 13 Storming of Valenciennes 1677 14 Battle of Cassel 1677 15 Takeover of Cambrai 1677 16 Dutch fleet burnt at Tobago in America 1676 actually 1677 17 Ghent taken in 1676 18 Swedes reestablished in Germany 1679 by the Treaty of Fontainebleau 19 and Strasbourg returned on the same day 1681 during the War of the Reunions 20 Capture of Luxembourg 1684 21 The Junction of the Two Seas by the Canal du Midi in 1681 22 Submission of Genoa 1685 Doge Francesco Maria Imperiale Lercari s visit to Versailles 23 The seas freed from the pirates 1685 24 Ambassadors from Muscovy in 1668 Pyotr Potemkin 1681 Pyotr Potemkin and Stefan Volkov and 1685 Semyon Erofeevich Almazov and Semyon Ippolitov of Guinea in 1670 Matteo Lopes on behalf of the Kingdom of Allada of Morocco and Fez in 1682 Mohammad Temim on behalf of Ismail Ibn Sharif of Siam in 1684 led by Benigne Vachet fr preceding the grander embassy of 1686 and of Algiers in 1683 Djiafar Aga Effendi during the French Algerian War 7 135 Reception Edit nbsp Portrait of Martin Desjardins by Hyacinthe Rigaud in 1692 with his hand on the captive statue of Holland now at the LouvreThe monument was generally well received on esthetic grounds and was widely considered Desjardins s major masterpiece In the 1692 portrait of Desjardins submitted by Hyacinthe Rigaud for entry into the Academie royale de peinture et de sculpture the sitter was represented with his hand on the captive statue of Holland 8 At the same time the entire project was criticized for the unrestrained adulation of Louis XIV and humiliation of fellow European nations that were inherent in the program The March 1686 inauguration ceremony complete with artillery salvos military march incense and genuflections was considered way over the top by the Duke of Saint Simon who attended it while a child and found it verging on cult 1 Francois Timoleon de Choisy similarly mocked the elevation of Louis to godlike status as a hubristic echo of pagan Roman emperor worship 9 Anonymous poems pamphlets and caricatures were circulated both in France and abroad lambasting the monument and not least the immortal man dedicace which by denying the monarch s mortality put into question his responsibility before God 2 161 The offensive depiction of France s neighbors as vanquished captives did nothing to help French diplomacy and was viewed several decades later as having possibly contributed to the kingdom s isolation 2 160 A follow up bombastic urban design project on a larger scale than the Place des Victoires started in 1685 and intended to be named the Place de Nos Conquetes was sharply toned down in 1699 to a more domestically focused Place Louis le Grand That year Louis XIV s senior official Louis Phelypeaux comte de Pontchartrain specifically referred in a letter to the Academie des Inscriptions to the reliefs slaves and inscriptions of the statue of the Place des Victoires as the example not to follow while aiming at something wise and reasonable for the new square now known as the Place Vendome 2 161 Later history Edit nbsp Altar baldachin of Sens Cathedral 1742 re employing four of the lanterns columnsThe lanterns were permanently turned off in 1699 decommissioned by royal order in 1717 and dismantled in 1718 La Feuillade s son donated their twelve precious marble columns to the Theatines congregation of Paris then established on what is now Quai Voltaire for their unfinished church 10 After his death in 1725 the Theatines who were short of money sold them to the Paris Foreign Missions Society the Couvent de la Madeleine de Traisnel fr and Sens Cathedral 11 The latter reemployed four of the columns for its alter baldachin erected in 1742 under Archbishop Jean Joseph Languet de Gergy on a design by Giovanni Niccolo Servandoni 12 13 In 1790 the statues of the captives deemed an offense to the new spirit of freedom were liberated and initially relocated at the Louvre Palace 14 On 10 August 1792 during that day s insurrection the monument s main statue was toppled to be melted into cannons Parts of the decoration including the four bronze reliefs were salvaged by Alexandre Lenoir for his Musee des Monuments francais 15 A temporary woodwork monument was erected to celebrate the insurrectionist victims of 10 August 1792 which in turn was removed during the Consulate Napoleon then commissioned a bronze heroic statue of General Louis Desaix which was produced by Claude Dejoux and inaugurated in 1810 The nude sculpture was widely disliked and removed in 1814 before Napoleon s fall Its metal was used for the new Equestrian statue of Henry IV by Francois Frederic Lemot inaugurated on the Pont Neuf in 1818 A more permanent replacement was erected in 1822 namely an equestrian statue of Louis XIV by Francois Joseph Bosio This monument bears no visual relationship with Desjardin s original even though its program overlaps especially as the 1672 crossing of the Rhine is represented on one of Bosio s two bronze reliefs on the pedestal Meanwhile the statues of the four captives were placed in 1804 in front of Les Invalides where they remained until 1939 In 1960 their ownership was transferred to the Louvre which in 1961 had them deposited in the Parc de Sceaux fr where they remained until 1992 In 1993 in the context of the museum s expansion known as the Grand Louvre project they were transferred together with other preserved parts of the monument to their current location in the newly created Cour Puget where they dominate the courtyard s lower section 16 Eleven bronze medallions are also preserved at the Louvre The two that decorated the monument s basis became part of the museum s collections in 1836 after having been kept at the Musee des Monuments francais The Abolition of Duelling 17 The Destruction of Heresy 1685 18 Five medallions from the lanterns were purchased during the Revolution by King George III of Great Britain and donated by the UK to France in 1914 15 The Restoration of Military Discipline 1665 by Arnould The Pyramid of the Corsicans in Rome 1668 by Arnould Capture of a City believed in the past to depict the Siege of Valenciennes 1676 1677 by Arnould The Reestablishment of the Swedes in Germany 1679 by Desjardins 19 The Submission of the Doge of Genoa 1685 by Desjardins 20 The remaining four all by Arnould were acquired by the Louvre between 1980 and 2006 The Victory of Saint Gotthard 1664 21 A second version of The Reestablishment of the Swedes in Germany after Desjardins s was found not respectful enough of the Swedish monarchy The Junction of the Two Seas 1681 The Magnificent Buildings of Versailles which does not appear in the 1686 engraving s list cited above Gallery Edit nbsp The four captives now at the Louvre nbsp Spain or Hope nbsp Holland or Anger nbsp Brandenburg or Grief nbsp Holy Roman Empire or Despondency nbsp Detail of trophies nbsp The Peace of Nijmegen Louvre nbsp Spain acknowkledges France s precedence Louvre nbsp The crossing of the Rhine Louvre nbsp The siege of Besancon Louvre nbsp The Destruction of Heresy Louvre nbsp The Abolition of Duelling Louvre nbsp The Submission of the Doge of Genoa Louvre nbsp The Victory of Saint Gotthard Louvre nbsp The Magnificent Buildings of Versailles Louvre nbsp The Pyramid of the Corsican Guard Erected then Demolished in Rome Louvre nbsp The Restoration of Military Discipline Louvre nbsp Engraving of one of the side lanterns by Nicolas Guerard 1686 nbsp The square and monument by Jacques Chereau 1775 nbsp Engraving of the monument by Francois Nicolas Martinet 1779 nbsp Drawing of the central statue by Paul Gregoire fr 1789 nbsp The statue of Desaix anonymous engraving 1810 nbsp Bosio s equestrian statue of Louis XIV 1822 photographed in 2007 See also EditMonument of the Four Moors Equestrian statue of Louis XIV Bernini Plague Column ViennaNotes Edit a b c d e f Jacques Hillairet 1963 Dictionnaire Historique des Rues de Paris Vol II Paris Editions de Minuit p 629 631 a b c d Rochelle Ziskin March 1994 The Place de Nos Conquetes and the Unraveling of the Myth of Louis XIV The Art Bulletin Taylor amp Francis 76 1 1 147 162 JSTOR 3046007 a b c d e f g Thomas W Gaehtgens 2003 La statue de Louis XIV et son programme iconographique In Isabelle Dubois Alexandre Gady Hendrik Ziegler eds Place des Victoires Histoire architecture societe Paris Les Editions de la MSH Louis XIV Martin Desjardins 1637 1694 et Jean Francois Lorta 1752 1837 Catalogue des sculptures des jardins de Versailles et de Trianon Danielle Chadych Dominique Leborgne 1999 Atlas de Paris Evolution d un paysage urbain Paris Parigramme p 66 June Hargrove 1989 Les Statues de Paris Antwerp Paris Fonds Mercator Albin Michel p 12 Jean Nagle 1989 La ville de l absolutisme triomphant De Francois Ier a Louis XV In Louis Bergeron ed Paris Genese d un Paysage Paris Picard pp 93 145 Martin van den Bogaert dit Desjardins 1640 1694 Louvre Herve Drevillon 2011 Les Rois Absolus 1629 1715 Paris Belin p 443 Julien de Gaulle 1839 1841 Nouvelle histoire de Paris et de ses environs Paris P M Pourrat freres Bernard Destutt de Tracy 1755 Remarques sur l etablissement des Theatins en France p 44 Cathedrale Saint Etienne et son tresor Musees Sens Le baldaquin enfin revele L Yonne Republicaine 1 September 2010 Breve Les captifs de Martin Desjardins a la place des Victoires Forum Pradier a b Albert Vuaflart 1914 Les Medaillons de la Place des Victoires Les Musees de France Paris Longuet 4 Quatre captifs dits aussi quatre nations vaincues L Espagne l Empire le Brandebourg et la Hollande Martin van den Bogaert dit Martin Desjardins 1682 1685 Ministere de la Culture Histoire des Arts Les Duels abolis Louvre L Heresie detruite ou la Revocation de l Edit de Nantes 1685 Louvre Les Suedois retablis en Allemagne 1679 Louvre La Soumission du doge de Genes 15 mai 1685 Louvre Un medaillon de la place des Victoires entre au Louvre Le Parisien 5 December 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis XIV Victory Monument amp oldid 1150428568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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