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Place Vendôme

The Place Vendôme (French pronunciation: [plas vɑ̃dom]), earlier known as the Place Louis-le-Grand, and also as the Place Internationale, is a square in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, France, located to the north of the Tuileries Gardens and east of the Église de la Madeleine. It is the starting point of the Rue de la Paix. Its regular architecture by Jules Hardouin-Mansart and pedimented screens canted across the corners give the rectangular Place Vendôme the aspect of an octagon. The original Vendôme Column at the centre of the square was erected by Napoleon I to commemorate the Battle of Austerlitz; it was torn down on 16 May 1871, by decree of the Paris Commune, but subsequently re-erected and remains a prominent feature on the square today.

Place Vendôme, Paris

History edit

 
The Place Vendôme, circa 1900

The Place Vendôme was begun in 1698 as a monument to the glory of the armies of Louis XIV, the Grand Monarque,[1] and called the Place des Conquêtes, to be renamed the Place Louis le Grand, when the conquests proved temporary. An over life-size equestrian statue of the king by François Girardon (1699) was donated by the city authorities and set up in its centre. It is believed to be the first large modern equestrian statue to be cast in a single piece. It was destroyed in the French Revolution; however, there is a small version in the Louvre.[2] This led to the popular joke that while Henri IV dwelled among the people by the Pont Neuf, and Louis XIII among the aristocrats of the Place des Vosges, Louis XIV preferred the company of the tax farmers in the Place Vendôme; each reflecting the group they had favoured in life.[3]

 
The Foire Saint-Ovide around 1770 by Jacques-Gabriel Huquier, Musée de la Révolution française

The site of the square was formerly the hôtel of César de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme, the illegitimate son of Henry IV and his mistress Gabrielle d'Estrées. Hardouin-Mansart bought the building and its gardens, with the idea of converting it into building lots as a profitable speculation. The plan did not materialize, and Louis XIV's Minister of Finance, Louvois, purchased the piece of ground, with the object of building a square, modelled on the successful Place des Vosges of the previous century. Louvois came into financial difficulties and nothing came of his project, either. After his death, the king purchased the plot and commissioned Hardouin-Mansart to design a house-front that the buyers of plots round the square would agree to adhere to. When the state finances ran low, the financier John Law took on the project, built himself a residence behind one of the façades, and the square was complete by 1720, just as his paper-money Mississippi bubble burst. Law suffered a major blow when he was forced to pay back taxes amounting to some tens of millions of dollars. With no way to pay such an amount, he was forced to sell the property he owned on the square. The buyers were members of the exiled Condé branch of the House of Bourbon who later returned to the country to reclaim their land in the town of Vendôme itself. Between 1720 and 1797, they acquired much of the square, including a freehold to parts of the site on which the Hôtel Ritz Paris now stands and in which they still maintain apartments. Their intention to restore a family palace on the site was dependent on the possible intentions of the adjacent Justice Ministry to expand its premises.

The Foire Saint-Ovide settled in 1764 on the Place until 1771.

When France established diplomatic relations with the short-lived Republic of Texas, the Texan legation was housed at Hôtel Bataille de Francès in 1 Place Vendôme.[4]

The Vendôme Column edit

 
The Vendôme Column

Creation edit

 
Statue of Napoleon by Antoine-Denis Chaudet

The original column was started in 1806 at Napoleon's direction and completed in 1810.[5] It was modelled after Trajan's Column, to celebrate the victory of Austerlitz; its veneer of 425 spiralling bas-relief bronze plates was made out of cannon taken from the combined armies of Europe, according to his propaganda. (The usual figure given is hugely exaggerated: 180 cannon were actually captured at Austerlitz.[6]) These plates were designed by the sculptor Pierre-Nolasque Bergeret and executed by a team of about 30 sculptors including Jean-Joseph Foucou, Louis-Simon Boizot, François Joseph Bosio, Lorenzo Bartolini, Claude Ramey, François Rude, Corbet, Clodion, Julie Charpentier, and Henri-Joseph Ruxthiel. A statue of Napoleon by Antoine-Denis Chaudet was placed on top of the column. Napoleon is depicted dressed in Roman attire, bare-headed, crowned with laurels, holding a sword in his right hand and a globe surmounted with a statue of Victory (as in Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker) in his left hand.[7]

In 1816, taking advantage of the Allied occupying force, a mob of men and horses had attached a cable to the neck of the statue of Napoleon atop the column, but it had refused to budge – one woman quipped: "If the Emperor is as solid on his throne as this statue is on its column, he's nowhere near descending the throne".[citation needed] After the Bourbon Restoration the statue, though not the column, was pulled down and melted down to provide the bronze for the recast equestrian statue of Henry IV on the Pont Neuf (as was bronze from sculptures on the Column of the Grande Armée at Boulogne-sur-Mer), though the statuette of Victory is still to be seen in the salon Napoléon of the Hôtel des Monnaies (which also contains a model of the column and a likeness of Napoleon's face copied from his death mask).[citation needed] A replacement statue of Napoléon in modern dress (a bicorn hat, boots and a redingote), however, was erected by Louis-Philippe, and a better, more augustly classicizing one by Louis-Napoléon (later Napoléon III).[8]

Demolition during the Paris Commune edit

Regardless of the political assessment of Karl Marx's theory, one thing is certain: he predicted the collapse of the Vendôme Column long before it happened. This prediction was given by him in the political pamphlet Le 18 Brumaire de Louis Bonaparte of 1852. This pamphlet, sharply critical of the political figure of Napoleon III, ends with the words: "But if the Imperial mantle finally falls on the shoulders of Louis Bonaparte, the bronze statue of Napoleon will fall from the height of the Vendôme Column".[9]

During the events in the run-up to the founding of the Commune, the 22 of March 1871 saw disturbances outside the National Guard when demonstrators holding banners declaring them to be "Friends of Peace" were blocked from entering the Place Vendôme by guardsmen who, after being fired on, opened fire on the crowd. At least 12 people were killed and many wounded.[10]

 
Communards pose with the statue of Napoléon I from the toppled Vendôme Column, 1871

During the Paris Commune in 1871, the painter Gustave Courbet, president of the Federation of Artists and elected member of the Commune,[11] who had previously expressed his dismay that this monument to war was located on the Rue de la Paix, proposed that the column be disassembled and preserved at the Hôtel des Invalides. Courbet argued that:

In as much as the Vendôme Column is a monument devoid of all artistic value, tending to perpetuate by its expression the ideas of war and conquest of the past imperial dynasty, which are reproved by a republican nation's sentiment, citizen Courbet expresses the wish that the National Defense government will authorise him to disassemble this column.[12]

His project as proposed was not adopted, though on 12 April 1871 legislation was passed authorizing the dismantling of the imperial symbol. When the column was taken down on 16 May its bronze plates were preserved. After employing a series of ropes and quarry workers, observers saw that the statue...

...fell over on the heap of sand prepared for it, with a mighty crash. There was no concussion on the ground, the column broke up almost before it reached its bed, and lay on the ground, a huge mass of ruin. An immense dust and smoke from the stones and crumpled clay rose up and an instant after a crowd of men, National Guards, Communards, and a sight-seeing Englishman flew upon it, and commenced to get bits of it as remembrance, but the excitement was so intense that people moved about as in a dream.[13]

Immediately following the destruction of the column and in repudiation of its perceived glorification of national chauvinism and bellicosity, the Place Vendôme was renamed the Place Internationale in celebration of the Communards' promotion of international fraternity.[14]

After the Paris Commune edit

After the suppression of the Paris Commune by Adolphe Thiers, the decision was made to rebuild the column with the statue of Napoléon restored at its apex. For his role in the Commune, Courbet was condemned to pay the costs of rebuilding the monument, estimated at 323,000 francs, in yearly installments of 10,000 francs. Unable to pay, Courbet went into self-imposed exile in Switzerland, the French government seized and sold the artist's paintings for a minor amount, and Courbet died in exile in December 1877.[15][16] In 1874 meanwhile, the column was re-erected at the center of the Place Vendôme with a copy of the original statue on top.[citation needed] An inner staircase leading to the top is no longer open to the public.[citation needed]

Features edit

At the centre of the square's long sides, Hardouin-Mansart's range of Corinthian pilasters breaks forward under a pediment, to create palace-like fronts. The arcading of the formally rusticated ground floors does not provide an arcaded passageway as at the Place des Vosges. The architectural linking of the windows from one floor to the next, and the increasing arch of their windowheads, provide an upward spring to the horizontals formed by ranks of windows. Originally the square was accessible by a single street and preserved an aristocratic quiet, except when the annual fair was held there. Then Napoléon opened the Rue de la Paix, and the 19th century filled the Place Vendôme with traffic. It was only after the opening in 1875 of the Palais Garnier on the other side of the Rue de la Paix that the centre of the Parisian fashionable life started gravitating around the Rue de la Paix and the Place Vendôme.[17]

Hôtels particuliers edit

Hôtels particuliers on the Place Vendôme:

 
  • N°1 : Hôtel Batailhe de Francès
  • N°3 : Hôtel de Coëtlogon
  • N°5 : Hôtel d'Orsigny
  • N°7 : Hôtel Le Bas de Montargis
  • N°9 : Hôtel de Villemaré
  • N°11 : Hôtel de Simiane
  • N°13 : Hôtel de Bourvallais
  • N°15 : Hôtel de Gramont
  • N°17 : Hôtel de Crozat
  • N°19 : Hôtel d'Évreux
  • N°21 : Hôtel de Fontpertuis
  • N°23 : Hôtel de Boullongne
  • N°25 : Hôtel Peyrenc de Moras
  • N°2 : Hôtel Marquet de Bourgade
  • N°4 : Hôtel Heuzé de Vologer
  • N°6 : Hôtel Thibert des Martrais
  • N°8 : Hôtel Delpech de Chaumot
  • N°10 : Hôtel de Latour-Maubourg
  • N°12 : Hôtel Baudard de Saint-James
  • N°14 : Hôtel de La Fare
  • N°16 : Hôtel Moufle
  • N°18 : Hôtel Duché des Tournelles
  • N°20 : Hôtel de Parabère
  • N°22 : Hôtel de Ségur
  • N°24 : Hôtel de Boffrand
  • N°26 : Hôtel de Noce
  • N°28 : Hôtel Gaillard de la Bouëxière

In popular culture edit

The Place Vendôme has been renowned for its fashionable and deluxe hotels such as the Ritz. Many famous dress designers have had their salons in the square. The only two remaining are the shirtmaker Charvet, at number 28, whose store has been on the Place Vendôme since 1877,[18] and the couturier Chéruit, at number 21, reestablished in 2008.[19] Since 1718, the Ministry of Justice, also known as the "Chancellerie", is located at the Hotel de Bourvallais located at numbers 11 and 13. Right on the other side of the Place Vendôme, number 14 houses the Paris office of JP Morgan, the investment bank, and number 20 the office of Ardian (formerly AXA Private Equity).

After his death in 1990, American artist Keith Haring was cremated and his ashes were sprinkled out on a hillside near Kutztown, except for one handful, that Yoko Ono brought to the Place Vendôme because she believed the spirit of Haring had told her to.

In the 1920s, American architect, Alonzo C. Webb worked making advertisements and designs in English for some of the fashionable houses along the Place Vendôme.

Place Vendôme was a 1998 movie by Nicole Garcia starring Catherine Deneuve.

Mark Twain made reference to the Vendôme Column in his speech Some Thoughts on the Science of Onanism.

The Place Vendôme is the setting for the theft of the Black Pearl in Episode 1 of Season 3 of the Netflix series Lupin.


Notable residents edit

Metro station edit

The Place Vendôme is:

Located near the Métro stationsOpéraPyramidesMadeleine and Tuileries.

It is served by lines            .

 
The Place Vendôme by night

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Louis XIV (Le Grand Monarque)" in M. S. Fitzgerald, The Kings of Europe, Past and Present, and Their Families (London, Longman, Green, and Co., 1879).
  2. ^ Louvre picture
  3. ^ Walks in Paris
  4. ^ "Where to find the Texas Embassy in Paris?". 11 February 2017.
  5. ^ "Place Vendôme". Unveiling the Timeless Charm of Place Vendôme.
  6. ^ Chandler, David G. (1995). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 320. ISBN 9781439131039.
  7. ^ Ambroise Tardieu, La Colonne de la Grande Armée d'Austerlitz ou de la Victoire, monument triomphal élevé à la gloire de la grande armée par Napoléon. Paris, 1822, p. 4 (list of sculptors) and plate 36 (statue of Napoleon).
  8. ^ King, Ross (2006). The Judgement of Paris. New York: Walker and Company. pp. 303–305. ISBN 9780802715166.
  9. ^ Маркс К., Энгельс Ф. Полное собрание сочиений. Москва. 2-е изд., т. 8, с. 217/Marx, K., and Engels, F. Complete collection of compositions. Moscow. 2nd ed., vol. 8, p. 217
  10. ^ Milner, John (2000). Art, War and Revolution in France, 1870-1871: Myth, Reportage and Reality. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 143–145. ISBN 0300084072. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  11. ^ Linda Nochlin. 2007. 'Courbet, The Commune and the Visual Arts.' in Courbet. New York: Thames & Hudson. pp. 84–94.
  12. ^ "Attendu que la colonne Vendôme est un monument dénué de toute valeur artistique, tendant à perpétuer par son expression les idées de guerre et de conquête qui étaient dans la dynastie impériale, mais que réprouve le sentiment d’une nation républicaine, [le citoyen Courbet] émet le vœu que le gouvernement de la Défense nationale veuille bien l’autoriser à déboulonner cette colonne. [1],
  13. ^ Horne, Alistair (1965). "Chapter 23: 'Floreal 79'". The Fall of Paris: The Siege and the Commune 1870-1. St. Martin's Press, New York. p. 351.
  14. ^ Ross, Kristin (2016). Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune. London: Verso Books. p. 23. ISBN 9781784780548.
  15. ^ Linda Nochlin. 2007. 'The De-Politicization of Gustave Courbet: Transformation and Rehabilitation under the Third Republic.' in Courbet. New York: Thames & Hudson. pp. 116–127.
  16. ^ King, Ross (2006). The Judgement of Paris. New York: Walker and Company. pp. 349–350. ISBN 9780802715166.
  17. ^ Perrot, Philippe (1996). Fashioning the Bourgeoisie: A History of Clothing in the Nineteenth Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 41. ISBN 0-691-00081-6.
  18. ^ Sarmant, Thierry; Luce Gaume (2003). La Place Vendôme: art, pouvoir et fortune (in French). Paris: Action artistique de la ville de Paris. p. 250.
  19. ^ Chéruit, 21 Place Vendôme, Paris, website
  20. ^ "Christmas in Paris with Anne Lister |". www.annelister.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  21. ^ Orr, Dannielle (2006). A sojourn in Paris 1824-25: sex and sociability in the manuscript writings of Anne Lister (1791-1840) (phd thesis). Murdoch University.

External links edit

48°52′03″N 2°19′46″E / 48.86750°N 2.32944°E / 48.86750; 2.32944

place, vendôme, this, article, about, square, paris, france, other, uses, place, vendome, french, pronunciation, plas, earlier, known, place, louis, grand, also, place, internationale, square, arrondissement, paris, france, located, north, tuileries, gardens, . This article is about the square in Paris France For other uses see Place Vendome The Place Vendome French pronunciation plas vɑ dom earlier known as the Place Louis le Grand and also as the Place Internationale is a square in the 1st arrondissement of Paris France located to the north of the Tuileries Gardens and east of the Eglise de la Madeleine It is the starting point of the Rue de la Paix Its regular architecture by Jules Hardouin Mansart and pedimented screens canted across the corners give the rectangular Place Vendome the aspect of an octagon The original Vendome Column at the centre of the square was erected by Napoleon I to commemorate the Battle of Austerlitz it was torn down on 16 May 1871 by decree of the Paris Commune but subsequently re erected and remains a prominent feature on the square today Place Vendome Paris Contents 1 History 2 The Vendome Column 2 1 Creation 2 2 Demolition during the Paris Commune 2 3 After the Paris Commune 3 Features 4 Hotels particuliers 5 In popular culture 6 Notable residents 7 Metro station 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Place Vendome circa 1900The Place Vendome was begun in 1698 as a monument to the glory of the armies of Louis XIV the Grand Monarque 1 and called the Place des Conquetes to be renamed the Place Louis le Grand when the conquests proved temporary An over life size equestrian statue of the king by Francois Girardon 1699 was donated by the city authorities and set up in its centre It is believed to be the first large modern equestrian statue to be cast in a single piece It was destroyed in the French Revolution however there is a small version in the Louvre 2 This led to the popular joke that while Henri IV dwelled among the people by the Pont Neuf and Louis XIII among the aristocrats of the Place des Vosges Louis XIV preferred the company of the tax farmers in the Place Vendome each reflecting the group they had favoured in life 3 nbsp The Foire Saint Ovide around 1770 by Jacques Gabriel Huquier Musee de la Revolution francaiseThe site of the square was formerly the hotel of Cesar de Bourbon Duke of Vendome the illegitimate son of Henry IV and his mistress Gabrielle d Estrees Hardouin Mansart bought the building and its gardens with the idea of converting it into building lots as a profitable speculation The plan did not materialize and Louis XIV s Minister of Finance Louvois purchased the piece of ground with the object of building a square modelled on the successful Place des Vosges of the previous century Louvois came into financial difficulties and nothing came of his project either After his death the king purchased the plot and commissioned Hardouin Mansart to design a house front that the buyers of plots round the square would agree to adhere to When the state finances ran low the financier John Law took on the project built himself a residence behind one of the facades and the square was complete by 1720 just as his paper money Mississippi bubble burst Law suffered a major blow when he was forced to pay back taxes amounting to some tens of millions of dollars With no way to pay such an amount he was forced to sell the property he owned on the square The buyers were members of the exiled Conde branch of the House of Bourbon who later returned to the country to reclaim their land in the town of Vendome itself Between 1720 and 1797 they acquired much of the square including a freehold to parts of the site on which the Hotel Ritz Paris now stands and in which they still maintain apartments Their intention to restore a family palace on the site was dependent on the possible intentions of the adjacent Justice Ministry to expand its premises The Foire Saint Ovide settled in 1764 on the Place until 1771 When France established diplomatic relations with the short lived Republic of Texas the Texan legation was housed at Hotel Bataille de Frances in 1 Place Vendome 4 Two bird s eye views of the Place Louis le Grand in 1705 nbsp View to the north with the Couvent des Capucines in the background and Montmartre in the distance nbsp View to the west with the domed Church of the Daughters of the Assumption visible on the south side of the Rue Saint HonoreThe Vendome Column edit nbsp The Vendome ColumnCreation edit nbsp Statue of Napoleon by Antoine Denis ChaudetThe original column was started in 1806 at Napoleon s direction and completed in 1810 5 It was modelled after Trajan s Column to celebrate the victory of Austerlitz its veneer of 425 spiralling bas relief bronze plates was made out of cannon taken from the combined armies of Europe according to his propaganda The usual figure given is hugely exaggerated 180 cannon were actually captured at Austerlitz 6 These plates were designed by the sculptor Pierre Nolasque Bergeret and executed by a team of about 30 sculptors including Jean Joseph Foucou Louis Simon Boizot Francois Joseph Bosio Lorenzo Bartolini Claude Ramey Francois Rude Corbet Clodion Julie Charpentier and Henri Joseph Ruxthiel A statue of Napoleon by Antoine Denis Chaudet was placed on top of the column Napoleon is depicted dressed in Roman attire bare headed crowned with laurels holding a sword in his right hand and a globe surmounted with a statue of Victory as in Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker in his left hand 7 In 1816 taking advantage of the Allied occupying force a mob of men and horses had attached a cable to the neck of the statue of Napoleon atop the column but it had refused to budge one woman quipped If the Emperor is as solid on his throne as this statue is on its column he s nowhere near descending the throne citation needed After the Bourbon Restoration the statue though not the column was pulled down and melted down to provide the bronze for the recast equestrian statue of Henry IV on the Pont Neuf as was bronze from sculptures on the Column of the Grande Armee at Boulogne sur Mer though the statuette of Victory is still to be seen in the salon Napoleon of the Hotel des Monnaies which also contains a model of the column and a likeness of Napoleon s face copied from his death mask citation needed A replacement statue of Napoleon in modern dress a bicorn hat boots and a redingote however was erected by Louis Philippe and a better more augustly classicizing one by Louis Napoleon later Napoleon III 8 Demolition during the Paris Commune edit Regardless of the political assessment of Karl Marx s theory one thing is certain he predicted the collapse of the Vendome Column long before it happened This prediction was given by him in the political pamphlet Le 18 Brumaire de Louis Bonaparte of 1852 This pamphlet sharply critical of the political figure of Napoleon III ends with the words But if the Imperial mantle finally falls on the shoulders of Louis Bonaparte the bronze statue of Napoleon will fall from the height of the Vendome Column 9 During the events in the run up to the founding of the Commune the 22 of March 1871 saw disturbances outside the National Guard when demonstrators holding banners declaring them to be Friends of Peace were blocked from entering the Place Vendome by guardsmen who after being fired on opened fire on the crowd At least 12 people were killed and many wounded 10 nbsp Communards pose with the statue of Napoleon I from the toppled Vendome Column 1871During the Paris Commune in 1871 the painter Gustave Courbet president of the Federation of Artists and elected member of the Commune 11 who had previously expressed his dismay that this monument to war was located on the Rue de la Paix proposed that the column be disassembled and preserved at the Hotel des Invalides Courbet argued that In as much as the Vendome Column is a monument devoid of all artistic value tending to perpetuate by its expression the ideas of war and conquest of the past imperial dynasty which are reproved by a republican nation s sentiment citizen Courbet expresses the wish that the National Defense government will authorise him to disassemble this column 12 His project as proposed was not adopted though on 12 April 1871 legislation was passed authorizing the dismantling of the imperial symbol When the column was taken down on 16 May its bronze plates were preserved After employing a series of ropes and quarry workers observers saw that the statue fell over on the heap of sand prepared for it with a mighty crash There was no concussion on the ground the column broke up almost before it reached its bed and lay on the ground a huge mass of ruin An immense dust and smoke from the stones and crumpled clay rose up and an instant after a crowd of men National Guards Communards and a sight seeing Englishman flew upon it and commenced to get bits of it as remembrance but the excitement was so intense that people moved about as in a dream 13 Immediately following the destruction of the column and in repudiation of its perceived glorification of national chauvinism and bellicosity the Place Vendome was renamed the Place Internationale in celebration of the Communards promotion of international fraternity 14 After the Paris Commune edit After the suppression of the Paris Commune by Adolphe Thiers the decision was made to rebuild the column with the statue of Napoleon restored at its apex For his role in the Commune Courbet was condemned to pay the costs of rebuilding the monument estimated at 323 000 francs in yearly installments of 10 000 francs Unable to pay Courbet went into self imposed exile in Switzerland the French government seized and sold the artist s paintings for a minor amount and Courbet died in exile in December 1877 15 16 In 1874 meanwhile the column was re erected at the center of the Place Vendome with a copy of the original statue on top citation needed An inner staircase leading to the top is no longer open to the public citation needed Features editAt the centre of the square s long sides Hardouin Mansart s range of Corinthian pilasters breaks forward under a pediment to create palace like fronts The arcading of the formally rusticated ground floors does not provide an arcaded passageway as at the Place des Vosges The architectural linking of the windows from one floor to the next and the increasing arch of their windowheads provide an upward spring to the horizontals formed by ranks of windows Originally the square was accessible by a single street and preserved an aristocratic quiet except when the annual fair was held there Then Napoleon opened the Rue de la Paix and the 19th century filled the Place Vendome with traffic It was only after the opening in 1875 of the Palais Garnier on the other side of the Rue de la Paix that the centre of the Parisian fashionable life started gravitating around the Rue de la Paix and the Place Vendome 17 Hotels particuliers editHotels particuliers on the Place Vendome nbsp N 1 Hotel Batailhe de Frances N 3 Hotel de Coetlogon N 5 Hotel d Orsigny N 7 Hotel Le Bas de Montargis N 9 Hotel de Villemare N 11 Hotel de Simiane N 13 Hotel de Bourvallais N 15 Hotel de Gramont N 17 Hotel de Crozat N 19 Hotel d Evreux N 21 Hotel de Fontpertuis N 23 Hotel de Boullongne N 25 Hotel Peyrenc de Moras N 2 Hotel Marquet de Bourgade N 4 Hotel Heuze de Vologer N 6 Hotel Thibert des Martrais N 8 Hotel Delpech de Chaumot N 10 Hotel de Latour Maubourg N 12 Hotel Baudard de Saint James N 14 Hotel de La Fare N 16 Hotel Moufle N 18 Hotel Duche des Tournelles N 20 Hotel de Parabere N 22 Hotel de Segur N 24 Hotel de Boffrand N 26 Hotel de Noce N 28 Hotel Gaillard de la BouexiereIn popular culture editThe Place Vendome has been renowned for its fashionable and deluxe hotels such as the Ritz Many famous dress designers have had their salons in the square The only two remaining are the shirtmaker Charvet at number 28 whose store has been on the Place Vendome since 1877 18 and the couturier Cheruit at number 21 reestablished in 2008 19 Since 1718 the Ministry of Justice also known as the Chancellerie is located at the Hotel de Bourvallais located at numbers 11 and 13 Right on the other side of the Place Vendome number 14 houses the Paris office of JP Morgan the investment bank and number 20 the office of Ardian formerly AXA Private Equity After his death in 1990 American artist Keith Haring was cremated and his ashes were sprinkled out on a hillside near Kutztown except for one handful that Yoko Ono brought to the Place Vendome because she believed the spirit of Haring had told her to In the 1920s American architect Alonzo C Webb worked making advertisements and designs in English for some of the fashionable houses along the Place Vendome Place Vendome was a 1998 movie by Nicole Garcia starring Catherine Deneuve Mark Twain made reference to the Vendome Column in his speech Some Thoughts on the Science of Onanism The Place Vendome is the setting for the theft of the Black Pearl in Episode 1 of Season 3 of the Netflix series Lupin nbsp Panoramic view of the Place VendomeNotable residents editClaude Dupin 1686 1769 the financier and contracted tax collector fermier general at 10 Place Vendome Augustin Blondel de Gagny 1695 1776 Abel Francois Poisson marquis de Marigny 1727 1781 the brother of Madame de Pompadour at 8 Place Vendome Franz Mesmer 1734 1815 the German physician and discoverer of animal magnetism at 16 Place Vendome Anne Lister 1791 1840 the English landowner and diarist stayed at 24 Place Vendome a guesthouse run by M and Mme de Boyve in 1824 25 20 This is where she met and carried on an affair with Maria Barlow 21 Frederic Chopin 1810 1849 the Polish composer at 12 Place Vendome where he died Virginia Oldoini Countess di Castiglione 1837 1899 the former mistress of Napoleon III lived in seclusion from the 1870s until the 1890s at 26 Place Vendome above Boucheron Samuel Jean de Pozzi 1846 1918 the surgeon and gynaecologist at 10 Place Vendome Coco Chanel 1883 1971 the fashion designer at 15 Place Vendome the Hotel Ritz Paris Prince Jefri Bolkiah at 3 5 Place Vendome Metro station editThe Place Vendome is Located near the Metro stations Opera Pyramides Madeleine and Tuileries It is served by lines nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The Place Vendome by nightSee also editList of tourist attractions in ParisReferences edit Louis XIV Le Grand Monarque in M S Fitzgerald The Kings of Europe Past and Present and Their Families London Longman Green and Co 1879 Louvre picture Walks in Paris Where to find the Texas Embassy in Paris 11 February 2017 Place Vendome Unveiling the Timeless Charm of Place Vendome Chandler David G 1995 The Campaigns of Napoleon New York Simon amp Schuster p 320 ISBN 9781439131039 Ambroise Tardieu La Colonne de la Grande Armee d Austerlitz ou de la Victoire monument triomphal eleve a la gloire de la grande armee par Napoleon Paris 1822 p 4 list of sculptors and plate 36 statue of Napoleon King Ross 2006 The Judgement of Paris New York Walker and Company pp 303 305 ISBN 9780802715166 Marks K Engels F Polnoe sobranie sochienij Moskva 2 e izd t 8 s 217 Marx K and Engels F Complete collection of compositions Moscow 2nd ed vol 8 p 217 Milner John 2000 Art War and Revolution in France 1870 1871 Myth Reportage and Reality New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 143 145 ISBN 0300084072 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Linda Nochlin 2007 Courbet The Commune and the Visual Arts in Courbet New York Thames amp Hudson pp 84 94 Attendu que la colonne Vendome est un monument denue de toute valeur artistique tendant a perpetuer par son expression les idees de guerre et de conquete qui etaient dans la dynastie imperiale mais que reprouve le sentiment d une nation republicaine le citoyen Courbet emet le vœu que le gouvernement de la Defense nationale veuille bien l autoriser a deboulonner cette colonne 1 Horne Alistair 1965 Chapter 23 Floreal 79 The Fall of Paris The Siege and the Commune 1870 1 St Martin s Press New York p 351 Ross Kristin 2016 Communal Luxury The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune London Verso Books p 23 ISBN 9781784780548 Linda Nochlin 2007 The De Politicization of Gustave Courbet Transformation and Rehabilitation under the Third Republic in Courbet New York Thames amp Hudson pp 116 127 King Ross 2006 The Judgement of Paris New York Walker and Company pp 349 350 ISBN 9780802715166 Perrot Philippe 1996 Fashioning the Bourgeoisie A History of Clothing in the Nineteenth Century Princeton Princeton University Press p 41 ISBN 0 691 00081 6 Sarmant Thierry Luce Gaume 2003 La Place Vendome art pouvoir et fortune in French Paris Action artistique de la ville de Paris p 250 Cheruit 21 Place Vendome Paris website Christmas in Paris with Anne Lister www annelister co uk Retrieved 2021 03 29 Orr Dannielle 2006 A sojourn in Paris 1824 25 sex and sociability in the manuscript writings of Anne Lister 1791 1840 phd thesis Murdoch University External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Place Vendome Paris Place Vendome and its history Comite Vendome Archived 2008 07 25 at the Wayback Machine in French 48 52 03 N 2 19 46 E 48 86750 N 2 32944 E 48 86750 2 32944 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Place Vendome amp oldid 1189018617 The Vendome Column, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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