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Sans-Souci Palace

The Palace of Sans-Souci, or Sans-Souci Palace (French: Palais Sans Souci [palɛ sɑ̃ susi]), was the principal royal residence of Henry I, King of Haiti, better known as Henri Christophe. It is located in the town of Milot, approximately five kilometres (3 mi) northeast of the Citadelle Laferrière, and thirteen kilometres (8 mi) southwest of the Three Bays Protected Area. Being among the first buildings constructed in a free Haiti after the Haitian Revolution, the Palace and the neighboring Citadelle, are Haitian icons and global symbols of liberty, and were inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1982.[1]

Palace of Sans-Souci
Native name
French: Palais Sans Souci
Aerial view of the palace ruins
LocationMilot, Haiti
Coordinates19°36′17″N 72°13′07″W / 19.604692°N 72.218596°W / 19.604692; -72.218596
Built1813
Built forHenry I, King of Haiti
Demolished1842 (earthquake)
ArchitectPompée Valentin Vastey
Architectural style(s)Baroque
Official nameNational History Park - Citadel, Sans Souci, Ramiers
Designated1982 (6th session)
Reference no.180
RegionLatin America and the Caribbean
Location of Palace of Sans-Souci in Haiti
Sans-Souci Palace, National History Park, Haiti.
Sans-Souci Palace in 1836.
Sans Souci. Castle of King Christopher of Haiti, lithograph by Gottfried Küstner (1800–1864) from a work by Carl Ritter, published in 1836.
Sans-Souci Palace in 1907.

History edit

The palace's name, French for "carefree", is shared with the loyal Haitian Revolution military leader Jean-Baptiste Sans Souci, who was executed by Henri Christophe in 1803.[2] The name also shares with Sanssouci Potsdam, Frederick the Great's palace in Potsdam, Germany. The palace was built between 1810 and 1813 by an undetermined number of workers.

The residence accommodated the king, his family, Queen Marie-Louise and their children, along with their royal staff of advisors. It was the most important of nine palaces commissioned by the king, as well as fifteen châteaux, numerous forts, and sprawling summer homes on his twenty plantations.[3] The nearest airport and large city is Cap-Haïtien.

Before the construction of Sans-Souci, Milot was a French plantation that Christophe managed for a period during the Haitian Revolution.[2] Many of Henri Christophe's contemporaries noted his ruthlessness, and it is unknown how many laborers died during the palace's construction. Under his reign, the palace was the site of opulent feasts and dances. It had immense gardens, artificial springs, and a system of waterworks. The site was formerly the area where Henri worked the fields for the French.[4]

Though Sans-Souci is now an empty ruin, at the time its splendor was noted by many foreign visitors. One American physician remarked that it had "the reputation of having been one of the most magnificent edifices of the West Indies."[5]

Close to the palace is the renowned mountaintop fortress; the Citadelle Laferrière, built under a decree by Henri Christophe to repel a feared French invasion that never occurred. It is reached by continuing on the trail behind the palace.

Crippled by stroke on 15 August 1820, Henri committed suicide by shooting himself with a silver bullet on the grounds of the palace on 8 October 1820.[4] He was subsequently buried in the Citadelle. His son and heir, Jacques-Victor Henry was bayoneted to death by revolutionaries ten days later.

A severe earthquake in 1842 destroyed a considerable part of the palace and devastated the nearby city of Cap-Haïtien; the palace was never rebuilt.

The palace shares its name with another Haitian revolutionary leader, Jean-Baptiste Sans Souci. He was an African slave who may have taken his name from the quartier near the parish of Grande Rivière where he first led troops in guerrilla fighting against the French in 1791. When Henri Christophe and other military leaders split from the French, they asked Sans Souci to join their ranks, but he declined and particularly viewed Christophe as a traitor. About ten years before the construction of his palace, the future Haitian king sent Colonel Sans Souci a conciliatory message inviting him to one of his headquarters at the main Grand Pré plantation, adjacent to the Milot plantation where he would later build the palace.[6] When Sans Souci arrived, Christophe's guards bayoneted him and his small band of guards to death.[7] Sans Souci Palace was built only a few yards away, or perhaps even exactly over, the place where Sans Souci the man was killed by Christophe.[8]

Inspiration edit

Some scholars have also asked whether Christophe took part of his inspiration for the palace from the Prussian king Frederick the Great's palace in Potsdam, Sanssouci, a symbol of European Enlightenment achievement. Other scholars argue, the palace's architecture is inspired by Germain Boffrand's designs for the Château de la Malgrange for Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, near Nancy.

However, Haitian historian Michel-Rolph Trouillot argues that the link to Sans Souci-Potsdam is unfounded. Rather, the association is an accident product of historical silence.[2] Most early writers like Joanna Brown or Hubert Cole suggested German influence such as architectural style or that Henri Christophe actually had German engineers build it, but provided little to no sources.[9] In fact, Haitian historian Vergniaud Leconte shows that it was Christophe’s military engineer, Henri Barre, who designed it.[10] Haitian architect Patrick Delatour, who was involved in restoring Sans Souci-Milot, also insisted that it resembles French urban planning if anything, not German.[11] Moreover, Trouillot notes that Austro-German geographer Karl Ritter, who visited Sans Souci-Milot eight days after Christophe’s death, describes it as “European” but not once suggests a link to Federick’s Sans Souci-Potsdam.[12]

It is very likely that San Souci-Milot is directly related to Jean-Baptiste Sans Souci, one of the early rebel leaders and loyal officers to Louverture’s army.[2] When the major black ranks of the rebel side (Toussaint Louverture, Henri Christophe, Jean-Jacques Dessalines) defected to the French army in 1802, Sans Souci remained loyal to the rebel cause and even fought against them. Because of this war within war, Sans Souci scorned Christophe in particular and did not recognize Christophe’s authority when he and the others returned to the rebel side. Christophe eventually killed Sans Souci, where the palace was likely built. Haitian historian Henock Trouillot suggests that Christophe built the palace exactly “to prove how solidly his power was implanted in this soil” by killing his enemy.[13] Trouillot alludes to how Christopher's actions aligned with Dahoman oral narratives and that the Tacoodonou story inspired him to build a palace where he killed his enemy.[2]

In any event, the palace' splendor was remarked upon by various visitors, generally acknowledged by many to be the Caribbean equivalent to the Palace of Versailles in France. Proud of its magnificence, the Palace of Sans-Souci was an important step in Henri Christophe's plan to demonstrate to foreigners, particularly Europeans and Americans, the power and capability of the black race. The African pride in the construction of the king's palace was captured by the comment of his advisor and architect, Pompée Valentin Vastey (Baron Valentin de Vastey), who said that the palace and its nearby church, "erected by descendants of Africans, show that we have not lost the architectural taste and genius of our ancestors who covered Ethiopia, Egypt, Carthage, and old Spain with their superb monuments."[14]

Current status edit

UNESCO designated it—and the Citadelle—World Heritage Sites in 1982.

Described as "one of the most remarkable attractions in the Western Hemisphere", the Palace of Sans-Souci is "seldom visited by foreigners" due to "decades of political instability and lawlessness" in Haiti.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ "National History Park – Citadel, Sans Souci, Ramiers". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e Trouillot, Michel-Rolph (1995). Silencing the Past. Boston: Beacon Press.
  3. ^ Cheesman, Clive (2007). The Armorial of Haiti: Symbols of Nobility in the Reign of Henri Christophe. London: The College of Arms.
  4. ^ a b "Sans-Souci: The Ruined Haitian Palace of a Slave Turned Brutal Kleptocrat". Slate. 2013-10-22. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  5. ^ Brown, Jonathan (1837). The History and Present Condition of St. Domingo. Philadelphia: W. Marshall. p. 186.
  6. ^ Phelipeau, René (1786). Plan de la plaine du Cap François en l'isle Saint Dominge. Paris: Bibliothèque Nationale.
  7. ^ Cole, Hubert (1967). Christophe: King of Haiti. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode.
  8. ^ Michel-Rolph., Trouillot (2015). Silencing the past : power and the production of history. Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807080535. OCLC 924271500.
  9. ^ Hubert Cole, Christophe, King of Haïti (New York: Viking, 1967).
  10. ^ Vergniaud Leconte, Henri Christophe dans l’histoire d’Haïti (Paris: BergerLevrault, 1931), 273.
  11. ^ Delatour, P. (2010). The Citadel, Palace of Sans Souci, Ramiers: Three Monuments, One Symbol of Freedom. Museum International, 62(4), 15–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0033.2011.01742.x
  12. ^ Karl Ritter, Naturhistorische Reise nach der westindischen Insel Hayti (Stuttgart: Hallberger’fche Berlagshandlung, 1836), 77; John Candler, Brief Notices of Haiti: with its Conditions, Resources, and Prospects (Fondon: Thames Ward, 1842); Jonathan Brown, The History and Present Condition of St. Domingo (Philadelphia: W. Marshall, 1837), 186; Prince Sanders, ed., Haytian Papers. A Collection of the Very Interesting Proclamations (London: Printed for W. Reed, 1816); Aimé Césaire, La Tragédie du roi Christophe (Paris: Présence Africaine, 1963); Alejo Carpentier, The Kingdom of This World (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1983 [1949]); Pompée Valentin Baron de Vastey, An Essay on the Causes of the Revolution and Civil Wars of Hayti (Exeter: printed at the Western Luminary Office, 1923 [1819]), 137.
  13. ^ Hénock Trouillot, Le gouvernement du Roi Henri Christophe (Port-au Prince: Imprimerie Centrale, 1972), 29.
  14. ^ Pompée Valentin Baron de Vastey (1819). An Essay on the Causes of the Revolution and Civil Wars of Hayti. printed at the Western Luminary Office.
  15. ^ "Haiti's Sans-Souci Palace : A journey to the past", BBC, 17 April 2012

External links edit

  •   Media related to Sans-Souci Palace at Wikimedia Commons
  • UNESCO World Heritage listing for the National History Park – Citadel, Sans Souci, Ramiers
  • on Global Heritage Network

Bibliography edit

Gauvin Alexander Bailey Der Palast von Sans-Souci in Milot, Haiti (ca. 1806–1813): Das vergessene Potsdam im Regenwald / The Palace of Sans-Souci in Milot, Haiti (ca. 1806–1813): The Untold Story of the Potsdam of the Rainforest, Deutscher Kunstverlag, 2018, ISBN 978-3422074668[1]

sans, souci, palace, frederick, great, palace, potsdam, germany, sanssouci, palace, sans, souci, french, palais, sans, souci, palɛ, susi, principal, royal, residence, henry, king, haiti, better, known, henri, christophe, located, town, milot, approximately, fi. For Frederick the Great s palace in Potsdam Germany see Sanssouci The Palace of Sans Souci or Sans Souci Palace French Palais Sans Souci palɛ sɑ susi was the principal royal residence of Henry I King of Haiti better known as Henri Christophe It is located in the town of Milot approximately five kilometres 3 mi northeast of the Citadelle Laferriere and thirteen kilometres 8 mi southwest of the Three Bays Protected Area Being among the first buildings constructed in a free Haiti after the Haitian Revolution the Palace and the neighboring Citadelle are Haitian icons and global symbols of liberty and were inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1982 1 Palace of Sans SouciNative name French Palais Sans SouciAerial view of the palace ruinsLocationMilot HaitiCoordinates19 36 17 N 72 13 07 W 19 604692 N 72 218596 W 19 604692 72 218596Built1813Built forHenry I King of HaitiDemolished1842 earthquake ArchitectPompee Valentin VasteyArchitectural style s BaroqueUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameNational History Park Citadel Sans Souci RamiersDesignated1982 6th session Reference no 180RegionLatin America and the CaribbeanLocation of Palace of Sans Souci in HaitiSans Souci Palace National History Park Haiti Sans Souci Palace in 1836 Sans Souci Castle of King Christopher of Haiti lithograph by Gottfried Kustner 1800 1864 from a work by Carl Ritter published in 1836 Sans Souci Palace in 1907 Contents 1 History 2 Inspiration 3 Current status 4 References 5 External links 6 BibliographyHistory editThe palace s name French for carefree is shared with the loyal Haitian Revolution military leader Jean Baptiste Sans Souci who was executed by Henri Christophe in 1803 2 The name also shares with Sanssouci Potsdam Frederick the Great s palace in Potsdam Germany The palace was built between 1810 and 1813 by an undetermined number of workers The residence accommodated the king his family Queen Marie Louise and their children along with their royal staff of advisors It was the most important of nine palaces commissioned by the king as well as fifteen chateaux numerous forts and sprawling summer homes on his twenty plantations 3 The nearest airport and large city is Cap Haitien Before the construction of Sans Souci Milot was a French plantation that Christophe managed for a period during the Haitian Revolution 2 Many of Henri Christophe s contemporaries noted his ruthlessness and it is unknown how many laborers died during the palace s construction Under his reign the palace was the site of opulent feasts and dances It had immense gardens artificial springs and a system of waterworks The site was formerly the area where Henri worked the fields for the French 4 Though Sans Souci is now an empty ruin at the time its splendor was noted by many foreign visitors One American physician remarked that it had the reputation of having been one of the most magnificent edifices of the West Indies 5 Close to the palace is the renowned mountaintop fortress the Citadelle Laferriere built under a decree by Henri Christophe to repel a feared French invasion that never occurred It is reached by continuing on the trail behind the palace Crippled by stroke on 15 August 1820 Henri committed suicide by shooting himself with a silver bullet on the grounds of the palace on 8 October 1820 4 He was subsequently buried in the Citadelle His son and heir Jacques Victor Henry was bayoneted to death by revolutionaries ten days later A severe earthquake in 1842 destroyed a considerable part of the palace and devastated the nearby city of Cap Haitien the palace was never rebuilt The palace shares its name with another Haitian revolutionary leader Jean Baptiste Sans Souci He was an African slave who may have taken his name from the quartier near the parish of Grande Riviere where he first led troops in guerrilla fighting against the French in 1791 When Henri Christophe and other military leaders split from the French they asked Sans Souci to join their ranks but he declined and particularly viewed Christophe as a traitor About ten years before the construction of his palace the future Haitian king sent Colonel Sans Souci a conciliatory message inviting him to one of his headquarters at the main Grand Pre plantation adjacent to the Milot plantation where he would later build the palace 6 When Sans Souci arrived Christophe s guards bayoneted him and his small band of guards to death 7 Sans Souci Palace was built only a few yards away or perhaps even exactly over the place where Sans Souci the man was killed by Christophe 8 Inspiration editSome scholars have also asked whether Christophe took part of his inspiration for the palace from the Prussian king Frederick the Great s palace in Potsdam Sanssouci a symbol of European Enlightenment achievement Other scholars argue the palace s architecture is inspired by Germain Boffrand s designs for the Chateau de la Malgrange for Leopold Duke of Lorraine near Nancy However Haitian historian Michel Rolph Trouillot argues that the link to Sans Souci Potsdam is unfounded Rather the association is an accident product of historical silence 2 Most early writers like Joanna Brown or Hubert Cole suggested German influence such as architectural style or that Henri Christophe actually had German engineers build it but provided little to no sources 9 In fact Haitian historian Vergniaud Leconte shows that it was Christophe s military engineer Henri Barre who designed it 10 Haitian architect Patrick Delatour who was involved in restoring Sans Souci Milot also insisted that it resembles French urban planning if anything not German 11 Moreover Trouillot notes that Austro German geographer Karl Ritter who visited Sans Souci Milot eight days after Christophe s death describes it as European but not once suggests a link to Federick s Sans Souci Potsdam 12 It is very likely that San Souci Milot is directly related to Jean Baptiste Sans Souci one of the early rebel leaders and loyal officers to Louverture s army 2 When the major black ranks of the rebel side Toussaint Louverture Henri Christophe Jean Jacques Dessalines defected to the French army in 1802 Sans Souci remained loyal to the rebel cause and even fought against them Because of this war within war Sans Souci scorned Christophe in particular and did not recognize Christophe s authority when he and the others returned to the rebel side Christophe eventually killed Sans Souci where the palace was likely built Haitian historian Henock Trouillot suggests that Christophe built the palace exactly to prove how solidly his power was implanted in this soil by killing his enemy 13 Trouillot alludes to how Christopher s actions aligned with Dahoman oral narratives and that the Tacoodonou story inspired him to build a palace where he killed his enemy 2 In any event the palace splendor was remarked upon by various visitors generally acknowledged by many to be the Caribbean equivalent to the Palace of Versailles in France Proud of its magnificence the Palace of Sans Souci was an important step in Henri Christophe s plan to demonstrate to foreigners particularly Europeans and Americans the power and capability of the black race The African pride in the construction of the king s palace was captured by the comment of his advisor and architect Pompee Valentin Vastey Baron Valentin de Vastey who said that the palace and its nearby church erected by descendants of Africans show that we have not lost the architectural taste and genius of our ancestors who covered Ethiopia Egypt Carthage and old Spain with their superb monuments 14 Current status editUNESCO designated it and the Citadelle World Heritage Sites in 1982 Described as one of the most remarkable attractions in the Western Hemisphere the Palace of Sans Souci is seldom visited by foreigners due to decades of political instability and lawlessness in Haiti 15 References edit National History Park Citadel Sans Souci Ramiers UNESCO World Heritage Convention United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 7 January 2023 a b c d e Trouillot Michel Rolph 1995 Silencing the Past Boston Beacon Press Cheesman Clive 2007 The Armorial of Haiti Symbols of Nobility in the Reign of Henri Christophe London The College of Arms a b Sans Souci The Ruined Haitian Palace of a Slave Turned Brutal Kleptocrat Slate 2013 10 22 ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved 2022 09 12 Brown Jonathan 1837 The History and Present Condition of St Domingo Philadelphia W Marshall p 186 Phelipeau Rene 1786 Plan de la plaine du Cap Francois en l isle Saint Dominge Paris Bibliotheque Nationale Cole Hubert 1967 Christophe King of Haiti London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Michel Rolph Trouillot 2015 Silencing the past power and the production of history Boston Beacon Press ISBN 9780807080535 OCLC 924271500 Hubert Cole Christophe King of Haiti New York Viking 1967 Vergniaud Leconte Henri Christophe dans l histoire d Haiti Paris BergerLevrault 1931 273 Delatour P 2010 The Citadel Palace of Sans Souci Ramiers Three Monuments One Symbol of Freedom Museum International 62 4 15 21 https doi org 10 1111 j 1468 0033 2011 01742 x Karl Ritter Naturhistorische Reise nach der westindischen Insel Hayti Stuttgart Hallberger fche Berlagshandlung 1836 77 John Candler Brief Notices of Haiti with its Conditions Resources and Prospects Fondon Thames Ward 1842 Jonathan Brown The History and Present Condition of St Domingo Philadelphia W Marshall 1837 186 Prince Sanders ed Haytian Papers A Collection of the Very Interesting Proclamations London Printed for W Reed 1816 Aime Cesaire La Tragedie du roi Christophe Paris Presence Africaine 1963 Alejo Carpentier The Kingdom of This World New York Alfred A Knopf 1983 1949 Pompee Valentin Baron de Vastey An Essay on the Causes of the Revolution and Civil Wars of Hayti Exeter printed at the Western Luminary Office 1923 1819 137 Henock Trouillot Le gouvernement du Roi Henri Christophe Port au Prince Imprimerie Centrale 1972 29 Pompee Valentin Baron de Vastey 1819 An Essay on the Causes of the Revolution and Civil Wars of Hayti printed at the Western Luminary Office Haiti s Sans Souci Palace A journey to the past BBC 17 April 2012External links edit nbsp Media related to Sans Souci Palace at Wikimedia Commons UNESCO World Heritage listing for the National History Park Citadel Sans Souci Ramiers Explore Sans Souci Palace with Google Earth on Global Heritage NetworkBibliography edit Gauvin Alexander Bailey Der Palast von Sans Souci in Milot Haiti ca 1806 1813 Das vergessene Potsdam im Regenwald The Palace of Sans Souci in Milot Haiti ca 1806 1813 The Untold Story of the Potsdam of the Rainforest Deutscher Kunstverlag 2018 ISBN 978 3422074668 1 Portals nbsp Haiti nbsp Architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sans Souci Palace amp oldid 1213891403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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