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Pont Neuf

The Pont Neuf (French pronunciation: [pɔ̃ nœf], "New Bridge") is the oldest standing bridge across the river Seine in Paris, France. It stands by the western (downstream) point of the Île de la Cité, the island in the middle of the river that was, between 250 and 225 BC, the birthplace of Paris, then known as Lutetia and, during the medieval period, the heart of the city.

Le Pont Neuf
The bridge as seen from the Pont des Arts
Coordinates48°51′27″N 2°20′30″E / 48.85750°N 2.34167°E / 48.85750; 2.34167
CrossesRiver Seine
LocaleParis, France
Next upstreamPont au Change
Pont Saint-Michel
Next downstreamPont des Arts
Characteristics
DesignArch bridge
MaterialStone
Total length232 metres (761 ft)[1]
Width22 metres (72 ft)[1]
No. of spans7 + 5
History
DesignerBelieved to be Baptiste Androuet du Cerceau and Guillaume Marchand
maintenance engineering by Soufflot, Perronet, Lagalisserie and Résal[2]
Construction start1578[1]
Construction end1607[1]
Location

The bridge is composed of two separate spans, one of five arches joining the left bank to the Île de la Cité, another of seven joining the island to the right bank. Old engraved maps of Paris show that the newly built bridge just grazed the downstream tip of the Île de la Cité; since then, the natural sandbar building of a mid-river island, aided by stone-faced embankments called quais, has extended the island. Today the tip of the island is the location of the Square du Vert-Galant, a small public park named in honour of Henry IV, nicknamed the "Green Gallant".

The name Pont Neuf was given to distinguish it from older bridges that were lined on both sides with houses, and has remained after all of those were replaced. Its name notwithstanding, it has long been the oldest bridge in Paris crossing the Seine. It has been listed since 1889 as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture.[3]

Construction edit

 
Painting of the Pont Neuf project as approved by King Henry III in 1578. The bridge was completed in 1607 with a less ornate design.

As early as 1550, Henry II was asked to build a bridge here because the existing Pont Notre-Dame was overloaded, but the expense was too much at the time.[2]

In February 1578,[4] the decision to build the bridge was made by Henry III who laid its first stone in on 31 May 1578,[5] the same year when the foundations of four piers and one abutment were completed.[2] Pierre des Isles, one of the builders, convinced the supervisory commission that the bridge, which was originally planned straight, would be more resistant to the river currents if its two sections were built at a slight angle. The change was adopted in May 1578.[6]

Further design changes were made during the summer of 1579. First, the number of arches was changed from eight and four to seven and five. This was not a problem on the north side, where nothing had been built, but on the south, where the four piles and the abutment on the Left Bank were already laid, the addition of the fifth arch necessitated reducing the length of the platform on the island, the terre-plein, from 28.5 toises to about 19. Second, it was decided to allow houses to be built on the bridge (though they never were). This required the widening of the bridge.[7] The remaining piers were built over the next nine years.[2] After a long delay beginning in 1588, due to political unrest and to the Wars of Religion, construction was resumed in 1599 under the reign of Henry IV.[2] The bridge was opened to traffic in 1604 and completed in July 1606.[8] It was inaugurated by Henry IV in 1607.

Like most bridges of its time, the Pont Neuf is constructed as a series of many short arch bridges, following Roman precedents. It was the first stone bridge in Paris not to support houses in addition to a thoroughfare, and was also fitted with pavements protecting pedestrians from mud and horses; pedestrians could also step aside into its bastions to let a bulky carriage pass. The decision not to include houses on the bridge can be traced back directly to Henry IV, who decided against their inclusion on the grounds that houses would impede a clear view of the Louvre,[9] which the newly built galerie du bord de l'eau linked to the Tuileries Palace.

The bridge had heavy traffic from the beginning;[2] it was for a long time the widest bridge in Paris. It has undergone much repair and renovation work, including rebuilding of seven spans in the long arm and lowering of the roadway by changing the arches from an almost semi-circular to elliptical form (1848–1855), lowering of sidewalks and faces of the piers, spandrels, cornices and replacing crumbled corbels as closely to the originals as possible.[2] In 1885, one of the piers of the short arm was undermined, removing the two adjacent arches, requiring them to be rebuilt and all the foundations strengthened.[2]

A major restoration of the Pont Neuf was begun in 1994 and was completed in 2007, the year of its 400th anniversary.

Mascarons edit

 
The mascarons, 381 in number, are copies of the Renaissance originals

The mascarons are the stone masks, 381 in number, each being different and which decorate the sides of the bridge. They represent the heads of forest and field divinities from ancient mythology, as well as satyrs and sylvains. They are copies of the originals attributed to the French Renaissance sculptor Germain Pilon (1525–1590), who also sculpted the tomb of King Henry II of France and Queen Catherine de'Medici in the Basilica of St Denis, five kilometers north of Paris. The mascarons remained in place until 1851–1854, when the bridge was completely rebuilt. At that time six of the original mascarons from the 16th century were placed in the Musée Carnavalet, along with eight molds of other originals. Eight other originals were first placed in the Musée de Cluny – Musée national du Moyen Âge, and are now in the French National Museum of the Renaissance in the Château d'Écouen. During their reconstruction, the Renaissance masks were replaced with copies made by noted 19th-century sculptors, including Hippolyte Maindron, Hubert Lavigne, Antoine-Louis Barye and Fontenelle. Fontenelle made 61 masks, which are found on the upstream side of the bridge between the right bank and the Île de la Cité.[10]

Equestrian statue of Henry IV edit

 
Statue of Henry IV on the Pont Neuf (1618, destroyed 1792, replaced 1818)

At the point where the bridge crosses the Île de la Cité, there stands a bronze equestrian statue of king Henry IV, originally commissioned from Giambologna under the orders of Marie de Médicis, Henri's widow and Regent of France, in 1614. After his death, Giambologna's assistant Pietro Tacca completed the statue, which was erected on its pedestal by Pietro Francavilla, in 1618. It was destroyed in 1792 during the French Revolution, but was rebuilt in 1818, following the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy. Bronze for the new statue was obtained with the bronze from a statue of Louis Charles Antoine Desaix, as well as from the statue of Napoleon in Place Vendôme, which was melted down. The new statue was cast from a mold made using a surviving cast of the original. Inside the statue, the new sculptor François-Frédéric Lemot put four boxes, containing a history of the life of Henry IV, a 17th-century parchment certifying the original statue, a document describing how the new statue was commissioned, and a list of people who contributed to a public subscription.

La Samaritaine edit

 

Between 1712 and 1719, replacing an earlier one, a large pump house was built on the bridge. It was decorated with an image of the Samaritan woman at the well. As a result, the structure (which included a carillon) was named La Samaritaine. Years after it was torn down (in 1813), Ernest Cognacq, a 19th-century merchant, set up a stand on the site and gradually grew his business to what became, in 1869, the department store La Samaritaine.

As the center of Paris edit

 
The Pont Neuf in 1615, (Map of Paris by Matthäus Merian)
 
The Pont Neuf in 1763, by Nicolas-Jean-Baptiste Raguenet
 
Le Pont-Neuf, Pierre-Auguste Renoir's 1872 painting of Parisians crossing the bridge

All through the 18th century, the Pont Neuf was the center of Paris, lively with both crime and commerce:

Czar Peter the Great, who came to study French civilization under the regency of the Duke d'Orleans, declared that he had found nothing more curious in Paris than the Pont Neuf; and, sixty years later, the philosopher Franklin wrote to his friends in America that he had not understood the Parisian character except in crossing the Pont Neuf.[11]

In 1862, Édouard Fournier traced its history in his lively two-volume Histoire du Pont-Neuf.[12] He describes how, even before it was completed (in 1607), gangs hid out in and around it, robbing and murdering people. It remained a dangerous place even as it became busier. For a long time, the bridge even had its own gallows.

This did not prevent people from congregating there, drawn by various stands and street performers (acrobats, fire-eaters, musicians, etc.). Charlatans and quacks of various sorts were also common, as well as the hustlers (shell game hucksters, etc.) and pickpockets often found in crowds – not to mention a lively trade in prostitution. Among the many businesses which, however, unofficially set up there, were several famous tooth pullers.

In 1701, Cotolendi quoted a letter supposedly written by a Sicilian tourist:

One finds on the Pont-Neuf an infinity of people who give tickets, some put fallen teeth back in, and others make crystal eyes; there are those who cure incurable illnesses; those who claim to have discovered the virtues of some powdered stones to white and to beautify the face. This one claims he makes old men young; there are those who remove wrinkles from the forehead and the eyes, who make wooden legs to repair the violence of bombs; finally everybody is so applied to work, so strongly and continually, that the devil can tempt no one but on Holidays and Sundays.[13]

With its numerous sellers of pamphlets and satirical performers, it was also a center for social commentary:

In the 16th cent. the Pont-Neuf was the scene of the recitals of Tabarin, a famous satirist of the day, and it was long afterwards the favourite rendezvous of news-vendors, jugglers, showmen, loungers, and thieves. Any popular witticism in verse was long known as un Pont-Neuf.[14]

In the seventeenth century, that bridge of memories, the old Pont Neuf of Paris, was the rendezvous of quacksalvers and mountebanks. Booths for the sale of various articles lined the sides of the bridge. People flocked there to see the sights, laugh, chat, make love and enjoy life as only Parisians can. Students and grisettes of the Quartier latin elbowed ladies and gentlemen of the court. Bourgeois families came to study the flippant manners of the aristocrats. Poodle clippers plied their trade; jugglers amused the quid nuncs with feats of dexterity; traveling dentists pulled teeth and sold balsams; clowns tumbled; and last, but not least, pickpockets lifted purses and silk handkerchiefs with impunity. Says Augustus J. C. Hare (Walks in Paris): "So central an artery is the Pont Neuf, that it used to be a saying with the Parisian police, that if, after watching three days, they did not see a man cross the bridge, he must have left Paris." One of the principal vendors of quack nostrums of the Pont Neuf was Montdor. He was aided by a buffoon named Tabarin, who made facetious replies to questions asked by his master, accompanied with laughable grimaces and grotesque gestures. The modern ringmaster and clown of the circus have similar scenes together, minus the selling of medicines.[15]

 
The Pont Neuf with the Eiffel Tower and the Institut de France in the background. A bateau-mouche sails on the Seine

Under Louis XV, thieves and entertainers were joined by recruiters, or "sellers of human flesh", who did their best to lure newcomers to Paris and others "with as much violence as the sale of Negros in the Congo".[16] Silversmiths and other luxury businesses nearby (which gave their name to the Quai des Orfèvres) drew visitors as well.

One yearly event, held on the nearby Place Dauphine, prefigured the Salon des Refusés which would give rise to the Impressionists. During the celebration of the Corpus Christi (Fête-Dieu), the Place Dauphine hosted one of the most magnificent reposoirs (portable altars for the Host).

Along with all the rich silverwork and tapestries placed on it, some local silversmiths ordered paintings for these. This led to art dealers being asked to participate and, ultimately, to the newest talents being shown at the Petite Fête-Dieu (the Small Corpus Christi), a reduced version of the Corpus Christi holiday which took place eight days later. Though their canvases were only shown from six in the morning to noon, this became an important opportunity for unknown artists to draw attention. Among other things, this led to the painters there signing their work, as was not frequent in the Salon – which was not always an advantage when the work was publicly and loudly critiqued.

Showing works, which often had no pretense of a religious subject, they might then be noticed and find an entree into the official Academy. Chardin is one of the most famous painters to have started this way.

In 1720, a young man of about twenty-two, son of the man who maintained the king's billiards, displayed a canvas here showing an antique bas-relief. J.-B. Vanloo passed by, looked at the canvas for a long time, found great qualities there, and bought it. He wanted afterwards to know the young painter, encouraged him, gave him advice, of which the latter perhaps had no need, got him work, which was more useful, and eight years later, the unknown of the place Dauphine was his colleague at the Academy of Painting.... he was called Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin.[17]

The slow decline of the bridge's central role began in 1754: "Starting in 1754, the first year of the vogue, the madness of the boulevards, it was no longer the thing to talk about the Cours [the Champs-Elysées], and still less of this poor Pont-Neuf. To the Boulevard, at once, long live the Boulevard!".[18] Still the bridge remained a lively place through the end of the century. With time, people became wary of its reputation and other changes subdued its atmosphere. In 1840, Lacroix wrote: "Once the pont Neuf was a perpetual fair; at present, it is just a bridge to be crossed without stopping."[19]

Possible first photograph of human being edit

 
Pont Neuf photographed by Louis Daguerre, 1836-39. Like most daguerreotypes, the image is mirrored. Two people can be seen lying in the shade.

In 1838, Louis Daguerre produced his famous daguerreotype portrait of the View of the Boulevard du Temple, widely considered the first photograph where a human can be seen. However, between 1836 and 1837, Daguerre made several tests, in order to experiment with and perfect the new technique in an outdoor environment.

One surviving example is an image of the Pont Neuf and the equestrian statue of Henry IV, made possibly as early as 1836. On the lower-left side of the image, what appears to be a worker, or perhaps two, can be seen lying against the fence, in the shadow of the statue.[20]

Christo's project edit

In 1985, after years of negotiation with the mayor of Paris, the art duo Christo and Jeanne-Claude wrapped the Pont Neuf.[21]

Access edit

 
Location on the Seine
Located near the Métro stationPont Neuf.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Pont-Neuf at Structurae
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitney 1929, pp. 137–141.
  3. ^ Base Mérimée: PA00085999, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French) Pont-Neuf
  4. ^ Ballon 1991, p. 117. A surveyor's report of 3 March 1578 is described and reproduced in Lasteyrie 1882, pp. 25–34. The lettres patentes were signed on 16 March 1578 (Lasteyrie 1882, p. 9).
  5. ^ Lasteyrie 1882, p. 47
  6. ^ Ballon 1991, pp. 117–118.
  7. ^ Ballon 1991, p. 118 and p. 324 (note 11).
  8. ^ Ballon 1991, p. 122.
  9. ^ Strohmayer 2007.
  10. ^ "Mascaron-du-pont-neuf". Carnavalet Museum. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  11. ^ Lacroix 1858, p. 337.
  12. ^ Fournier 1862, vol. 1 and vol. 2 at Google Books.
  13. ^ Cotolendi 1701, p. 292.
  14. ^ Baedeker 1884, p. 208.
  15. ^ Evans 1909, p. 342.
  16. ^ Lacroix 1858, p. 346.
  17. ^ Fournier 1862, vol. 1, pp. 299–300.
  18. ^ Fournier 1862, vol. 2, p. 345.
  19. ^ Lacroix 1858, p. 347.
  20. ^ "Boulevard du Temple en 1838 (1837?) par Daguerre" (search for "Pont Neuf") at Niepce-daguerre.com. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 September 2007. Retrieved 15 May 2010..

Bibliography edit

  • Baedeker, Karl (1884). Paris and environs: with routes from London to Paris and from Paris to the Rhine and Switzerland, 8th revised edition. Leipzig: Karl Baedeker. Copy at Google Books.
  • Ballon, Hilary (1991). The Paris of Henri IV: Architecture and Urbanism. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262023092.
  • Cotolendi, Charles (1701). Saint-Evremoniana: Ou Receuil de diverses piéces curieuses. Amsterdam: Pierre Mortier. Copy at Google Books. Note: "The author affixed the name of Saint-Evremont in order to quicken the sale" (Additions to the Library, Boston Athenaeum, 1890, p. 1257).
  • DeJean, Joan. "The bridge where Paris became modern: the Pont Neuf" in her How Paris Became Paris: The Invention of the Modern City NY: Bloomsbury, 2014. ISBN 978-1608195916. chapter 1, pp. 21–44.
  • Evans, Henry Ridgely (1909). The Old and the New Magic. Chicago: The Open Court Publishing Co. Copy at Google Books.
  • Fournier Édouard (1862). Histoire du Pont-Neuf. Paris: E. Dentu. Vol. 1 (copies 1 and 2) and vol. 2 (copies 1 and 2) at Google Books.
  • Lacroix, Paul (1858). Curiosités de l'histoire du vieux Paris. Paris: Adolphe Delahays. Copy at Google Books.
  • Lasteyrie, R. de (1882). "Documents inédits sur la construction du Pont-Neuf," Mémoires de la Société de l'Histoire de Paris et de l'Ile de France, vol. 9 (1882), pp. 1–94. Copy at Gallica.
  • Metman, Yves, editor (1987). Le Registre ou plumitif de la construction du Pont Neuf: archives nationales Z1f 1065. Paris: Service des travaux historiques de la Ville de Paris. OCLC 21504748.
  • Strohmayer, Ulf (2007). "Engineering Vision: the Pont-Neuf in Paris and Modernity", pp. 75–92, in The City and the Senses: Urban Culture since 1500, edited by A. Cowan and J. Steward. Basingstoke: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0754684237.
  • Whitney, Charles S. ([1929]; reprint 2003). Bridges of the World: Their Design and Construction. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0486429953.

External links edit

  • About Pont Neuf Bridge in Paris
  • France Pittoresque: Histoire du Pont Neuf (in French)

pont, neuf, bridge, toulouse, toulouse, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sch. For the bridge in Toulouse see Pont Neuf Toulouse This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pont Neuf news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Pont Neuf French pronunciation pɔ nœf New Bridge is the oldest standing bridge across the river Seine in Paris France It stands by the western downstream point of the Ile de la Cite the island in the middle of the river that was between 250 and 225 BC the birthplace of Paris then known as Lutetia and during the medieval period the heart of the city Le Pont NeufThe bridge as seen from the Pont des ArtsCoordinates48 51 27 N 2 20 30 E 48 85750 N 2 34167 E 48 85750 2 34167CrossesRiver SeineLocaleParis FranceNext upstreamPont au ChangePont Saint MichelNext downstreamPont des ArtsCharacteristicsDesignArch bridgeMaterialStoneTotal length232 metres 761 ft 1 Width22 metres 72 ft 1 No of spans7 5HistoryDesignerBelieved to be Baptiste Androuet du Cerceau and Guillaume Marchandmaintenance engineering by Soufflot Perronet Lagalisserie and Resal 2 Construction start1578 1 Construction end1607 1 LocationThe bridge is composed of two separate spans one of five arches joining the left bank to the Ile de la Cite another of seven joining the island to the right bank Old engraved maps of Paris show that the newly built bridge just grazed the downstream tip of the Ile de la Cite since then the natural sandbar building of a mid river island aided by stone faced embankments called quais has extended the island Today the tip of the island is the location of the Square du Vert Galant a small public park named in honour of Henry IV nicknamed the Green Gallant The name Pont Neuf was given to distinguish it from older bridges that were lined on both sides with houses and has remained after all of those were replaced Its name notwithstanding it has long been the oldest bridge in Paris crossing the Seine It has been listed since 1889 as a monument historique by the French Ministry of Culture 3 Contents 1 Construction 2 Mascarons 3 Equestrian statue of Henry IV 4 La Samaritaine 5 As the center of Paris 6 Possible first photograph of human being 7 Christo s project 8 Access 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Bibliography 12 External linksConstruction edit nbsp Painting of the Pont Neuf project as approved by King Henry III in 1578 The bridge was completed in 1607 with a less ornate design As early as 1550 Henry II was asked to build a bridge here because the existing Pont Notre Dame was overloaded but the expense was too much at the time 2 In February 1578 4 the decision to build the bridge was made by Henry III who laid its first stone in on 31 May 1578 5 the same year when the foundations of four piers and one abutment were completed 2 Pierre des Isles one of the builders convinced the supervisory commission that the bridge which was originally planned straight would be more resistant to the river currents if its two sections were built at a slight angle The change was adopted in May 1578 6 Further design changes were made during the summer of 1579 First the number of arches was changed from eight and four to seven and five This was not a problem on the north side where nothing had been built but on the south where the four piles and the abutment on the Left Bank were already laid the addition of the fifth arch necessitated reducing the length of the platform on the island the terre plein from 28 5 toises to about 19 Second it was decided to allow houses to be built on the bridge though they never were This required the widening of the bridge 7 The remaining piers were built over the next nine years 2 After a long delay beginning in 1588 due to political unrest and to the Wars of Religion construction was resumed in 1599 under the reign of Henry IV 2 The bridge was opened to traffic in 1604 and completed in July 1606 8 It was inaugurated by Henry IV in 1607 Like most bridges of its time the Pont Neuf is constructed as a series of many short arch bridges following Roman precedents It was the first stone bridge in Paris not to support houses in addition to a thoroughfare and was also fitted with pavements protecting pedestrians from mud and horses pedestrians could also step aside into its bastions to let a bulky carriage pass The decision not to include houses on the bridge can be traced back directly to Henry IV who decided against their inclusion on the grounds that houses would impede a clear view of the Louvre 9 which the newly built galerie du bord de l eau linked to the Tuileries Palace The bridge had heavy traffic from the beginning 2 it was for a long time the widest bridge in Paris It has undergone much repair and renovation work including rebuilding of seven spans in the long arm and lowering of the roadway by changing the arches from an almost semi circular to elliptical form 1848 1855 lowering of sidewalks and faces of the piers spandrels cornices and replacing crumbled corbels as closely to the originals as possible 2 In 1885 one of the piers of the short arm was undermined removing the two adjacent arches requiring them to be rebuilt and all the foundations strengthened 2 A major restoration of the Pont Neuf was begun in 1994 and was completed in 2007 the year of its 400th anniversary Mascarons edit nbsp The mascarons 381 in number are copies of the Renaissance originalsThe mascarons are the stone masks 381 in number each being different and which decorate the sides of the bridge They represent the heads of forest and field divinities from ancient mythology as well as satyrs and sylvains They are copies of the originals attributed to the French Renaissance sculptor Germain Pilon 1525 1590 who also sculpted the tomb of King Henry II of France and Queen Catherine de Medici in the Basilica of St Denis five kilometers north of Paris The mascarons remained in place until 1851 1854 when the bridge was completely rebuilt At that time six of the original mascarons from the 16th century were placed in the Musee Carnavalet along with eight molds of other originals Eight other originals were first placed in the Musee de Cluny Musee national du Moyen Age and are now in the French National Museum of the Renaissance in the Chateau d Ecouen During their reconstruction the Renaissance masks were replaced with copies made by noted 19th century sculptors including Hippolyte Maindron Hubert Lavigne Antoine Louis Barye and Fontenelle Fontenelle made 61 masks which are found on the upstream side of the bridge between the right bank and the Ile de la Cite 10 Equestrian statue of Henry IV edit nbsp Statue of Henry IV on the Pont Neuf 1618 destroyed 1792 replaced 1818 At the point where the bridge crosses the Ile de la Cite there stands a bronze equestrian statue of king Henry IV originally commissioned from Giambologna under the orders of Marie de Medicis Henri s widow and Regent of France in 1614 After his death Giambologna s assistant Pietro Tacca completed the statue which was erected on its pedestal by Pietro Francavilla in 1618 It was destroyed in 1792 during the French Revolution but was rebuilt in 1818 following the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy Bronze for the new statue was obtained with the bronze from a statue of Louis Charles Antoine Desaix as well as from the statue of Napoleon in Place Vendome which was melted down The new statue was cast from a mold made using a surviving cast of the original Inside the statue the new sculptor Francois Frederic Lemot put four boxes containing a history of the life of Henry IV a 17th century parchment certifying the original statue a document describing how the new statue was commissioned and a list of people who contributed to a public subscription La Samaritaine edit nbsp Between 1712 and 1719 replacing an earlier one a large pump house was built on the bridge It was decorated with an image of the Samaritan woman at the well As a result the structure which included a carillon was named La Samaritaine Years after it was torn down in 1813 Ernest Cognacq a 19th century merchant set up a stand on the site and gradually grew his business to what became in 1869 the department store La Samaritaine As the center of Paris edit nbsp The Pont Neuf in 1615 Map of Paris by Matthaus Merian nbsp The Pont Neuf in 1763 by Nicolas Jean Baptiste Raguenet nbsp Le Pont Neuf Pierre Auguste Renoir s 1872 painting of Parisians crossing the bridgeAll through the 18th century the Pont Neuf was the center of Paris lively with both crime and commerce Czar Peter the Great who came to study French civilization under the regency of the Duke d Orleans declared that he had found nothing more curious in Paris than the Pont Neuf and sixty years later the philosopher Franklin wrote to his friends in America that he had not understood the Parisian character except in crossing the Pont Neuf 11 In 1862 Edouard Fournier traced its history in his lively two volume Histoire du Pont Neuf 12 He describes how even before it was completed in 1607 gangs hid out in and around it robbing and murdering people It remained a dangerous place even as it became busier For a long time the bridge even had its own gallows This did not prevent people from congregating there drawn by various stands and street performers acrobats fire eaters musicians etc Charlatans and quacks of various sorts were also common as well as the hustlers shell game hucksters etc and pickpockets often found in crowds not to mention a lively trade in prostitution Among the many businesses which however unofficially set up there were several famous tooth pullers In 1701 Cotolendi quoted a letter supposedly written by a Sicilian tourist One finds on the Pont Neuf an infinity of people who give tickets some put fallen teeth back in and others make crystal eyes there are those who cure incurable illnesses those who claim to have discovered the virtues of some powdered stones to white and to beautify the face This one claims he makes old men young there are those who remove wrinkles from the forehead and the eyes who make wooden legs to repair the violence of bombs finally everybody is so applied to work so strongly and continually that the devil can tempt no one but on Holidays and Sundays 13 With its numerous sellers of pamphlets and satirical performers it was also a center for social commentary In the 16th cent the Pont Neuf was the scene of the recitals of Tabarin a famous satirist of the day and it was long afterwards the favourite rendezvous of news vendors jugglers showmen loungers and thieves Any popular witticism in verse was long known as un Pont Neuf 14 In the seventeenth century that bridge of memories the old Pont Neuf of Paris was the rendezvous of quacksalvers and mountebanks Booths for the sale of various articles lined the sides of the bridge People flocked there to see the sights laugh chat make love and enjoy life as only Parisians can Students and grisettes of the Quartier latin elbowed ladies and gentlemen of the court Bourgeois families came to study the flippant manners of the aristocrats Poodle clippers plied their trade jugglers amused the quid nuncs with feats of dexterity traveling dentists pulled teeth and sold balsams clowns tumbled and last but not least pickpockets lifted purses and silk handkerchiefs with impunity Says Augustus J C Hare Walks in Paris So central an artery is the Pont Neuf that it used to be a saying with the Parisian police that if after watching three days they did not see a man cross the bridge he must have left Paris One of the principal vendors of quack nostrums of the Pont Neuf was Montdor He was aided by a buffoon named Tabarin who made facetious replies to questions asked by his master accompanied with laughable grimaces and grotesque gestures The modern ringmaster and clown of the circus have similar scenes together minus the selling of medicines 15 nbsp The Pont Neuf with the Eiffel Tower and the Institut de France in the background A bateau mouche sails on the SeineUnder Louis XV thieves and entertainers were joined by recruiters or sellers of human flesh who did their best to lure newcomers to Paris and others with as much violence as the sale of Negros in the Congo 16 Silversmiths and other luxury businesses nearby which gave their name to the Quai des Orfevres drew visitors as well One yearly event held on the nearby Place Dauphine prefigured the Salon des Refuses which would give rise to the Impressionists During the celebration of the Corpus Christi Fete Dieu the Place Dauphine hosted one of the most magnificent reposoirs portable altars for the Host Along with all the rich silverwork and tapestries placed on it some local silversmiths ordered paintings for these This led to art dealers being asked to participate and ultimately to the newest talents being shown at the Petite Fete Dieu the Small Corpus Christi a reduced version of the Corpus Christi holiday which took place eight days later Though their canvases were only shown from six in the morning to noon this became an important opportunity for unknown artists to draw attention Among other things this led to the painters there signing their work as was not frequent in the Salon which was not always an advantage when the work was publicly and loudly critiqued Showing works which often had no pretense of a religious subject they might then be noticed and find an entree into the official Academy Chardin is one of the most famous painters to have started this way In 1720 a young man of about twenty two son of the man who maintained the king s billiards displayed a canvas here showing an antique bas relief J B Vanloo passed by looked at the canvas for a long time found great qualities there and bought it He wanted afterwards to know the young painter encouraged him gave him advice of which the latter perhaps had no need got him work which was more useful and eight years later the unknown of the place Dauphine was his colleague at the Academy of Painting he was called Jean Baptiste Simeon Chardin 17 The slow decline of the bridge s central role began in 1754 Starting in 1754 the first year of the vogue the madness of the boulevards it was no longer the thing to talk about the Cours the Champs Elysees and still less of this poor Pont Neuf To the Boulevard at once long live the Boulevard 18 Still the bridge remained a lively place through the end of the century With time people became wary of its reputation and other changes subdued its atmosphere In 1840 Lacroix wrote Once the pont Neuf was a perpetual fair at present it is just a bridge to be crossed without stopping 19 Possible first photograph of human being edit nbsp Pont Neuf photographed by Louis Daguerre 1836 39 Like most daguerreotypes the image is mirrored Two people can be seen lying in the shade In 1838 Louis Daguerre produced his famous daguerreotype portrait of the View of the Boulevard du Temple widely considered the first photograph where a human can be seen However between 1836 and 1837 Daguerre made several tests in order to experiment with and perfect the new technique in an outdoor environment One surviving example is an image of the Pont Neuf and the equestrian statue of Henry IV made possibly as early as 1836 On the lower left side of the image what appears to be a worker or perhaps two can be seen lying against the fence in the shadow of the statue 20 Christo s project editIn 1985 after years of negotiation with the mayor of Paris the art duo Christo and Jeanne Claude wrapped the Pont Neuf 21 Access edit nbsp Location on the Seine Located near the Metro station Pont Neuf See also editLes Amants du Pont Neuf The Lovers on the Bridge a film by Leos Carax released in 1991 List of crossings of the River Seine List of bridges in FranceNotes edit a b c d Pont Neuf at Structurae a b c d e f g h Whitney 1929 pp 137 141 Base Merimee PA00085999 Ministere francais de la Culture in French Pont Neuf Ballon 1991 p 117 A surveyor s report of 3 March 1578 is described and reproduced in Lasteyrie 1882 pp 25 34 The lettres patentes were signed on 16 March 1578 Lasteyrie 1882 p 9 Lasteyrie 1882 p 47 Ballon 1991 pp 117 118 Ballon 1991 p 118 and p 324 note 11 Ballon 1991 p 122 Strohmayer 2007 Mascaron du pont neuf Carnavalet Museum Retrieved 13 October 2015 Lacroix 1858 p 337 Fournier 1862 vol 1 and vol 2 at Google Books Cotolendi 1701 p 292 Baedeker 1884 p 208 Evans 1909 p 342 Lacroix 1858 p 346 Fournier 1862 vol 1 pp 299 300 Fournier 1862 vol 2 p 345 Lacroix 1858 p 347 Boulevard du Temple en 1838 1837 par Daguerre search for Pont Neuf at Niepce daguerre com Retrieved 11 February 2013 Christo site page on the Pont Neuf Archived from the original on 4 September 2007 Retrieved 15 May 2010 Bibliography editBaedeker Karl 1884 Paris and environs with routes from London to Paris and from Paris to the Rhine and Switzerland 8th revised edition Leipzig Karl Baedeker Copy at Google Books Ballon Hilary 1991 The Paris of Henri IV Architecture and Urbanism Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press ISBN 978 0262023092 Cotolendi Charles 1701 Saint Evremoniana Ou Receuil de diverses pieces curieuses Amsterdam Pierre Mortier Copy at Google Books Note The author affixed the name of Saint Evremont in order to quicken the sale Additions to the Library Boston Athenaeum 1890 p 1257 DeJean Joan The bridge where Paris became modern the Pont Neuf in her How Paris Became Paris The Invention of the Modern City NY Bloomsbury 2014 ISBN 978 1608195916 chapter 1 pp 21 44 Evans Henry Ridgely 1909 The Old and the New Magic Chicago The Open Court Publishing Co Copy at Google Books Fournier Edouard 1862 Histoire du Pont Neuf Paris E Dentu Vol 1 copies 1 and 2 and vol 2 copies 1 and 2 at Google Books Lacroix Paul 1858 Curiosites de l histoire du vieux Paris Paris Adolphe Delahays Copy at Google Books Lasteyrie R de 1882 Documents inedits sur la construction du Pont Neuf Memoires de la Societe de l Histoire de Paris et de l Ile de France vol 9 1882 pp 1 94 Copy at Gallica Metman Yves editor 1987 Le Registre ou plumitif de la construction du Pont Neuf archives nationales Z1f 1065 Paris Service des travaux historiques de la Ville de Paris OCLC 21504748 Strohmayer Ulf 2007 Engineering Vision the Pont Neuf in Paris and Modernity pp 75 92 in The City and the Senses Urban Culture since 1500 edited by A Cowan and J Steward Basingstoke Ashgate ISBN 978 0754684237 Whitney Charles S 1929 reprint 2003 Bridges of the World Their Design and Construction Mineola New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0486429953 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pont Neuf Tourist review About Pont Neuf Bridge in Paris France Pittoresque Histoire du Pont Neuf in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pont Neuf amp oldid 1157892032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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