Fontaine du Palmier explained

Monument Name:Fountain of the Palm
Native Name:Fontaine du Palmier
Coordinates:48.8575°N 2.3473°W
Designer:François-Jean Bralle
Type:fountain, victory column
Width:20feet
Height:59feet
Begin:1806
Open:1808
Map Name:Paris
Map Relief:yes
Extra: Monument Historique (1925) PA00085806

Design

The Fountain du Palmier was one of a series of fifteen fountains commissioned by Napoleon in 1806 to his minister of the Interior, Emmanuel Cretet. It was designed by the engineer François-Jean Bralle, who was in charge of the Paris fountains and water supply during the First Empire. It was finished in 1808.

The column, modeled after a Roman triumphal column, takes its name from the sculpted palm leaves at the top, commemorating Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign. The bands of bronze on the column pay tribute to Napoleon's victories at the siege of Danzig (1807), the Battle of Ulm (1805), the Battle of Marengo (1800), the Battle of the Pyramids (1798), and the Battle of Lodi (1796).

At the top of the column is a statue of Victory made of gilded bronze, carrying the laurels of victory. People sometimes mistake the statue of the woman representing victory for a bird. The statue is the work of the sculptor Louis-Simon Boizot. The present statue is a copy; the original is in the courtyard of the Carnavalet Museum of the history of Paris.

Around the base of the column are four statues representing Vigilance, Justice, Strength and Prudence, also made by Boizot. The lower basin of the fountain, designed by architect Gabriel Davioud, was added to the fountain in 1858 during the reign of Emperor Louis Napoleon when the Place du Châtelet was expanded and the fountain moved to its center during the renovations of Baron Haussmann.[2] At that time the base was also decorated with statues of Egyptian sphinxes spouting streams of water, sculpted by Henri Alfred Jacquemart.[3]

Bibliography

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Fontaine du Palmier Fountain in Paris. EU Touring.
  2. Book: Ayers. Andrew. The Architecture of Paris: An Architectural Guide. 2004. Edition Axel Menges. 978-3930698967. 27–28.
  3. Web site: La fontaine du Palmier. paris1900.lartnouveau.com.