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CALENDARIO HEBREO-SHABBAT LUNAR: APOLLO 11=FRANCE=MARY MAGDALENE S DAY JULY 14TH 1969 (BASTILLE DAY)=NEW MOON
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من: BARILOCHENSE6999  (الرسالة الأصلية) مبعوث: 24/07/2024 02:14
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8-pointed Star Meaning: Octagram, The Star Of Lakshmi And Ishtar Symbolism  And Tattoo Ideas
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Holidays And Festivals
• Bastille Day (July 14th) was incorporated in 1789 .
• Armistice Day (November 11) was incorporated in
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• Holiday's nearly every week in the month of May.
• Many regional festivals throughout France .
• Every French citizen is entitled to 5 weeks of
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Berlin marks 20 years since the fall of the Wall

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من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 02/09/2024 15:05
Free Will vs. Predestination: Calvinism and Arminianism Explained

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من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 02/09/2024 15:14
Juan Calvino
Información personal
Nombre de nacimiento Jehan Cauvin
Nombre en francés Jean Calvin Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Nacimiento 10 de julio de 1509jul. Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Noyon (Picardía (provincia)Reino de Francia) Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Fallecimiento 27 de mayo de 1564
(54 años)
Ginebra (República de Ginebra) Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Causa de muerte Sepsis Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Sepultura Cementerio de los Reyes Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Nacionalidad Francesa
Religión Calvinismo Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Lengua materna Francés Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
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Padres Gérard Cauvin y Jeanne Lefranc
Cónyuge Idelette Calvin Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
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Educado en
Supervisor doctoral Melchior Wolmar Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
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Información profesional
Ocupación Pastor, reformador protestante, teólogoabogado y escritor Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
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Firma

جواب  رسائل 14 من 21 في الفقرة 
من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 03/09/2024 00:56

Las raíces calvinistas del secreto bancario

 En Ginebra Calvino dejó sus huella no sólo en sus calles sino también en el espíritu de la ciudad. RDB

Calvino continúa estando muy presente en la vida suiza en el inicio del siglo XXI y, especialmente, respecto a la cuestión del secreto bancario. El reformador, del que se celebra este viernes el 500 aniversario de su nacimiento, fue la fuente de la emancipación ciudadana.

Xavier Comtesse, de Avenir Suisse, recuerda esta herencia. Entrevista.

El predicador no sólo fue un gran renovador de la sociedad. También dejó en Suiza y en el mundo una manera de pensar que impregna, todavía hoy en día, al mundo occidental. Lo que hay en la forma moderna de comprender a Dios o respecto al dinero, sean banqueros o no, o incluso en nuestra comprensión moderna de las instituciones y de la democracia: Calvino ha marcado todos estos campos.

swissinfo.ch: ¿En qué se basa el protestantismo de Calvino?

Xavier Comtesse: Calvino basó su pensamiento en que la Biblia tal y como está formulada en el lenguaje del pueblo, en la separación entre el Estado y la religión y sobre el acuerdo según el cual los creyentes, que financian la comuna, pueden elegir a los sacerdotes.

Esta forma de organización típicamente calvinista además, con el tiempo, se extendió a otros ámbitos no religiosos de la mentalidad helvética. Los representantes del Estado deben permanecer alejados de todas las instituciones religiosas y la ciudadanía participa en las decisiones políticas a todos los niveles, de la comuna al gobierno del país.

Estos dos elementos han llevado a una emancipación del pueblo, a su “otorgamiento de poderes”, como se dice hoy en día, el acceso a una forma de poder.

swissinfo.ch : ¿Y qué hubiera sido Suiza sin Calvino?

X.C.: Sin esta emancipación de la gente realizada por Calvino, creo que simplemente no tendríamos nada de democracia directa. Seríamos una República, como nuestros vecinos. Aunque aquí hay que citar también a Lutero que desempeñó en la Suiza de habla alemana el mismo papel que Calvino.

Este traslado de estructuras de la organización comunal hasta el nivel más alto del Estado es típico de Suiza.

swissinfo.ch : ¿Fue Ginebra más importante que Zúrich en esta materia?

X.C.: La suiza francófona no existía en ese momento. Ginebra era la ciudad que brillaba más de todo el país. Basilea también tenía importancia, pero este no era el caso de Zúrich, de Berna o de Lausana.

Esto es lo que explica que Calvino tuviera una fama internacional más grande que Lutero. Además después de Napoleón, Zúrich tenía menos habitantes que Ginebra y su economía era también menos importante.

swissinfo.ch: ¿Qué huellas dejó Calvino en el protestantismo?

X.C.: Conozco especialmente el caso de los Estados Unidos. El calvinismo es un pensamiento muy extendido. Cerca de 15 millones de personas son calvinistas. En los países anglosajones, se les llama presbiterianos.

Otras comunidades viven en Escocia y en Corea del Sur. Se calcula que existen 50 millones de presbiterianos en el mundo. Aunque en Suiza son sólo un puñado.

swissinfo.ch: ¿Cuáles fueron las relaciones de Calvino con la economía y con los bancos?

X.C.: Como reacción al comercio de indulgencias practicado por la Iglesia Católica para garantizar los ingresos del Vaticano, Calvino fue uno de los primeros dirigentes de la Iglesia en autorizar la concesión de créditos, pero con unas condiciones morales muy estrictas.

También levantó un puente hacia el presente. Los tipos de interés estaban fuera del debate, porque el crédito debía ser barato. Él trataba, como en la religión y la política, de proteger al ciudadano en el ámbito bancario imponiendo exigencias morales muy elevadas.

Además, uno de los principios del protestantismo es el de proteger la esfera privada. La combinación de este principio con el de la autorización de manejar los asuntos bancarios lleva directamente al secreto bancario.

swissinfo.ch: Pero históricamente el secreto bancario está considerado como un instrumento para proteger al ciudadano de las intrusiones del Estado en su esfera privada.

X.C.: Exactamente. Por ello la noción de secreto bancario da lugar a numerosos malentendidos. El nombre ‘secreto bancario’ conduce al error. Sería mejor hablar de ‘protección de la esfera privada por parte de la banca’.

Este tipo de protección no existe sólo en Suiza. En Francia por ejemplo, una esposa no tiene el derecho de informarse de las cuentas bancarias de su marido, que la ley considera como dependiente de la esfera privada.

En Suiza hemos ido un paso más adelante. La ley nos protege contra la arbitrariedad eventual del Estado. Por eso nos topamos con Calvino, ya que él elaboró este principio para proteger a los ciudadanos de la arbitrariedad de la poderosa Iglesia Católica.

swissinfo.ch: ¿Qué queda en la actualidad de esta ética calvinista, si se piensa en la crisis de los bancos y la plaza financiera?

X.C.: Esta crisis es una crisis de la moral. Deberíamos pues enfrentarnos más en el futuro al aspecto de la responsabilidad social. Se trataría de un tipo de un nuevo calvinismo, laico, con las señales morales pero no religiosas.

Lo podemos ver en las manifestaciones, por ejemplo, en el dominio del control de calidad. Los nuevos estándares ISO sirven para llenar los déficits en el campo de las responsabilidades.

La Organización Internacional de Normalización (ISO) tiene su sede en Ginebra, como tantas otras instituciones de influencia internacional. Eso también es una herencia de Calvino.

Otra ‘institución’ ginebrina es, nada menos, que Internet, que fue inventado en el CERN. Ahora bien Internet es calvinista ya que permite a la ciudadanía, a la población, al usuario, tener un acceso directo a la información.

Antes había que solicitar a los poderosos intermediarios para poder recibir estas informaciones. Internet rehace así el acceso a los mercados, de la misma manera que la reforma de Calvino había hecho posible un acceso directo a Dios.

swissinfo.ch: Alexander Künzle
(Adaptación: Iván Turmo)

https://www.swissinfo.ch/spa/sociedad/las-ra%c3%adces-calvinistas-del-secreto-bancario/7500696

جواب  رسائل 15 من 21 في الفقرة 
من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 08/09/2024 23:23
Pope Francis reflects on his life and mortality in memoir | Reuters
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And going into the house, they saw the child with Mary his mother, and they fell down and worshiped him. Then, opening their treasures, they offered him gifts, gold and frankincense and myrrh. (Matthew 2:11, ESV)

The significance of the wise men's gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh! |  Christians Read
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من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 12/09/2024 04:04

CHURCH OF THE MADELEINE

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Church of the Madeleine

There has been a church in this area since the 13th century when the neighbourhood was known as Ville l'Evêque and its church was Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, situated at the end of the present-day boulevard Malesherbes. In the 18th century a new building was deemed necessary in view of the recent growth in the population of the area. Pierre Constant d'Ivry drew up the plans for the structure. The aim was to produce a church worthy of its site on the monumental perspective of rue Royale and place Louis XV. On Constant's death in 1777 the plans were modified by Guillaume Couture but the Revolution stopped construction work in 1791.

In 1802 the signing of the Concordat restored Catholicism to France, however the newly created parish of the Madeleine was centred not on the unfinished building but on the Church of the Assumption in rue Saint-Honoré. Furthermore, the purpose for the site begun by Couture was no longer clearly understood. Consequently, many alternative schemes were put forward, the one accepted being that by Pierre Vignon. In accordance with an imperial decree of February 1806 Vignon's project was to develop the half-built structure into a Stock Exchange, a commercial tribunal as well as the Bank of France.
 
However, another imperial decree signed by Napoleon at the Posen Camp on the symbolic date of 2nd December, 1806 cancelled the previous decree and advertised a competition for “the building of a temple to the glory of the French army on the site of the Madeleine”. The building programme included the addition of an inscription in the pediment which read “L'Empereur Napoléon aux soldats de la Grande Armée”, as well as on the inside the addition of marble tablets on which were inscribed the names of all the men (arranged in order of army corps and regiment) who had fought at the battles of Ulm, Austerlitz and Iéna. Those who had died on these battlefields were to have their names inscribed in solid gold tablets – there was also to be another list of all the soldiers, this time listed according to their different home departments, these on tablets of silver. To complete this memorial there were to have been bas-reliefs showing the regiments of the Grand Army, statues of the Maréchals and all their trophies, and the “flags, standards and drums” taken from the enemy.
 
Eighty artists entered the competition which was won by Etienne de Beaumont. But the Emperor nevertheless decided to award the project to Vignon: “I wanted a temple not a church” was his furious comment on Beaumont's design. Vignon then set about demolishing what had been built by Couture – this took until 1811. When the major work finally started it progressed only very slowly owing to shortage of funds. After the Russian Campaign, Napoleon abandoned completely the idea of a Temple of Glory and began to reconsider the idea for a church. With the fall of the Empire work stopped once again.
 
It was the Restoration which re-launched the project, giving the construction back to the Catholic church and consecrating it to the memory of the Royal family who climbed the scaffold to their deaths close to that spot during the Revolution. Vignon once again directed the work beginning in 1816, but on his death in 1828 this was taken over by Huvée. In 1842 the church was made once again the principal parish of the 1st arrondissement, and it was consecrated by the Archbishop of Paris in 1845.
 
A peripteral temple with Corinthian columns, the Madeleine is one of the best examples of Neo-classical architecture in Paris. It marks Napoleon's express wish to bring back the grandeur of antiquity in celebration “of the memory of the immortal glory of the Emperor…and that of his companions in arms”. Although nothing of the original Napoleonic programme for the sculptural decoration of the church remains, nevertheless there are many exceptional works within the church, notably the monumental bronze doors by Triqueti and the “Baptism of Christ” by Rude. Of particular interest is the fresco in the semi-cupola of the apse produced by Ziegler representing the glorious history of Christianity (1835-1837). This work, the only fresco in a Parisian church to include a figure of Napoleon, shows Christ surrounded by Mary Magdelene, the Apostles and the great figures of Christianity, namely Constantine, Clovis, Godefroy de Bouillon, Frederick Barbarossa, Joan of Arc, Dante, Raphael, Pius VII and the Emperor in his coronation robes.

 

https://www.napoleon.org/en/magazine/places/church-of-the-madeleine/

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من: BARILOCHENSE6999 مبعوث: 12/09/2024 04:11

La Madeleine

IN SEARCH OF THE PARIS OF NAPOLÉON BONAPARTE

Napoléon Bonaparte is never far from the cultural imagination; he is arguably the most famous French person of all time.

Ph: Manjik/Dreamstime

But the one-time Emperor of France is back in the news in a big way, thanks to the release of Ridley Scott’s Napoleon.

Joaquin Phoenix as Emperor Napoléon crowning Vanessa Kirby’s Joséphine, with Lincoln Cathedral, England, playing the part of Notre-Dame.

While the movie was mostly filmed in England, Malta, and Morocco, you can relive Napoléon’s Parisian days the next time you’re in the City of Light by visiting the monuments he built, and other sites of Napoleonic significance …

Where Napoléon Stayed & Played

Born in Corsica, Napoléon was sent to military school in Champagne at the age of eight. Seven years later, in 1784, he was awarded a scholarship to attend the prestigious École Militaire in Paris (below). The academy, which still operates today, is located at the southern end of the Champ de Mars (the field where young cadets once drilled), behind the Eiffel Tower.

The École Militaire, as seen from the Eiffel Tower.

Napoléon’s transfer to Paris involved a two-day journey by boat. He disembarked the Seine at a wharf in the Marais and, as he made his way eastwards to his new school, bought a copy of the novel Gil Blas from a quayside bookseller.

In 1787, after having graduated, a young lieutenant Napoléon found himself back in Paris on leave, and gravitated to the gardens of the Palais-Royal, a notorious party central at the time (above). A cash-strapped Duc d’Orléans Louis-Philippe II had redeveloped his palatial backyard into a pleasure ground in 1784. He had the three wings that frame the northern end of the estate built, renting out the ground spaces as shops and restaurants, while filling the upper floors with dance rooms, gaming dens, billiard halls and brothels. In the middle of the garden enclave there was a circus where acrobatic riders thrilled the crowds, and all sorts of puppet shows and dance performances entertained in the groves of fancifully cut trees. Thousands of Parisians strolled, drank, conversed and flirted in these botanical arcades. The Palais-Royal was a fairground, bazaar and dance party, all in one. It was open day and night, and open to all Parisians — except for police. So you can imagine the air of abandon. Much was lost here. Money — although you could always see the various mortgage agents that had set up shop, or pawnbrokers, to sell your precious gold watch if need be. Virginity, too — a future Emperor Napoléon picked up his first female conquest in this very garden. And lives — Louis Philippe II’s heady vision, inaugurated in 1784, struck him gold, but also eventually cost the duke his head, as he had unwittingly laid the fertile ground for the French Revolution. It was here where courtesans passed as countesses, a precursor of a democratic future France; and where, far from the watchful eyes of the authorities, political discussions could gather momentum, morphing into full-blown movements. The sans-culotte Camille Desmoulins gave a particularly impassioned anti-Royalty speech from atop a table of a café terrace; two days later the Bastille was stormed, and the rest is l’histoire …

Napoléon was often in Paris during the revolutionary years, where the now-Republican networked, wheeled-and-dealed, and generally tried not to lose his head. He was by the old Palais des Tuileries on the day it was stormed by a mob that slaughtered the King’s Swiss guard. Napoléon was savvy in both his political and survival instincts, and ambitious to boot, but surely he can’t have had an inkling that day that this palace (which would be later destroyed by the Paris Commune of 1871) would one day be his imperial home. He did aspire extremely high, however, moving in all the right circles, including A-list parties and salons, where he soon met his fate, in the seductive form of the future Empress Joséphine.

Napoléon’s professional fate was secured on 5th October 1795, when he was asked to deal with thousands of Royalist soldiers who were making their way down Rue Saint-Honoré, en route to the National Convention, where they hoped to retake power. In front of the Saint-Roch Church (above), Napoléon commanded, inspired, and led his troops so successfully (the cannon-ball damage bears witness to this day) that the young Corsican became an overnight hero. He received an instant promotion and a plush new office on Place Vendôme for his efforts.

In March 1796, after Joséphine finally agreed to a lovesick Napoléon’s marriage proposal, the couple wed in a civil ceremony at 3 Rue d’Antin. (The building is no longer occupied by the 2nd arrondissement mairie but a plaque marks the momentous event). When not away on duty, Napoléon lived with Joséphine on Rue Chantereine (which was soon renamed Rue de la Victoire).

Ph: Courtesy of Chteau de Malmaison.

Sadly, her elegant manor house no longer exists, but the lovely country estate just west of Paris that she bought for herself while Napoléon was in Egypt — Chteau de Malmaison — remains in all its neo-Classical glory and is a must-visit for lovers of history, gardens, and architecture.

Napoléon’s Architectural Legacy

A coup d’état of late 1799 — generally considered to mark the end of the French Revolution — saw the overthrow of the Directory leadership of France, and the elevation of Napoléon to the autocratic position of First Consul. The future Emperor (he would crown himself in 1804, in Notre-Dame Cathedral) was now in a position to make his physical mark on his capital.

The neo-Classical trend in architecture had been in favour for a while, but Napoléon, with his passion for arches, columns, and temples, took it to whole new heights, for it represented the fabled grandeur he yearned to project. He wanted Paris to be the new Rome, as befitting a leader who saw himself as a future legend of history. But the aesthetically driven ruler was also engineering-minded, and as such he wanted his city to be cleaner, safer, and more practical. To admire the various changes Napoléon made to Paris, visit the following …

Waterways & Bridges

Napoléon’s utilitarian plan included the construction of new bridges. First up was the Pont des Arts (above), built between 1801 and 1804. The visionary leader demanded it be constructed mostly in iron, which was scarce and expensive at the time, and not considered as chic as limestone, Paris’s classic building block. His vision was perfect; the result was a bridge both modern and elegant, one that has stood the aesthetic test of time. The Pont d’Austerlitz and Pont d’Iéna bridges followed.

Ph: Janis Smits/Dreamstime

As First Consul, Napoléon also ordered the construction of the Canal Saint-Martin (above), Bassin de la Villette (Paris’s largest artificial lake), and Canal de l’Ourcq. Intended to boost the city’s supply of drinking water, this was funded, appropriately enough, by a new tax on wine.

He also cleaned up the banks of the Seine, which were more like strips of beach than true working quays required for the trading needs of a major river city. Up on street level, Napoléon had all roads renumbered, starting from the Seine, with even numbers on the right, odd on the left.

And, to bring drinking water to more Parisians, he decorated those streets with various (often grandiose) fountains, including the Fontaine de la Victoire on Place du Chtelet and the Fontaine du Mars, situated by the now-iconic restaurant of the same name (above).

Rue de Rivoli

As the above examples show, Napoléon’s utilitarian plan could overlap into his ornamental plan for the city. This was also the case with his vision for Rue de Rivoli, for which he turned to his favourite architects, Charles Percier and Pierre-François Fontaine (who had so stunningly redecorated Malmaison in the antique style).

Rue de Rivoli was, originally, a project born of necessity. For one, Napoléon wanted to ease the congested traffic on the nearby Rue Saint-Honoré. But an assassination attempt on him in Rue Saint-Niçaise — one of the narrow medieval streets that once criss-crossed this area, cluttering the approach to the Louvre — also gave Napoléon the impetus for change.

Rue Saint-Niçaise, as seen on the 1730s Turgot Map of Paris.

For a little more back-story … on 24th December 1800, Napoléon was in the Palais des Tuileries, waiting for Joséphine and her daughter Hortense who were primping in preparation for a night out at the opera. Napoléon finally gave in to the whims of feminine grooming, and headed out in the first carriage, leaving Joséphine to continue fussing about the best way to wrap on her cashmere shawl. The sartorial delay most likely saved her and Hortense’s lives, for a Royalist-planted gunpowder-filled wagon exploded on Rue Saint-Niçaise just before the second carriage reached its vicinity. Twenty Parisians died in the attack, which also caused major structural damage of nearby buildings. This gave Napoléon both the motivation and excuse for a rebuild; he wanted to clean up the city’s streets, making them safer, wider, and more modern.

While Napoléon’s nephew Emperor Napoléon III, would end up seeing out this city-wide vision (when he hired Baron Haussmann to make over Paris in the mid-century), Napoléon made a great start with Rue de Rivoli (named for one of his Italian victories), which originally stretched from Place de la Concorde to the Place du Palais-Royal. The extensive scope gave Percier and Fontaine a large canvas on which to apply Classical design principles.

Ph: Engin Korkmaz/Dreamstime.

They placed three levels above an arcaded ground floor (the arcades perhaps being inspired by Bologna, which Napoléon had visited in 1796), and minimal decoration beyond shutters and two lines of balconies. (Percier and Fontaine also placed gates opposite the first section of Rue de Rivoli, to line the northern border of the Jardin des Tuileries; they’re still there today.) The seemingly endless perspective projected that Napoléon-adored grandeur, but at the same time, with the continuous arches and curved attic roof (which was added later), the overall effect is charming rather than severe. Rue de Castiglione and Place des Pyramides were also part of the redevelopment, which would go on to influence Haussmann years later.

Colonne Vendôme

Turn from Rue Rivoli into the aforementioned Rue de Castiglione, and you can’t miss the towering verdigris Colonne Vendôme up ahead. The Trajan’s Column-inspired monument was erected in 1806, to replace Place Vendôme’s equestrian statue of Louis XIV, which had been destroyed during the Revolution, and to commemorate the Battle of Austerlitz. Surmounted by a statue of the Emperor, its spiraling bas-relief plates — melted down from 1200 bronze cannons taken from the Russian and Austrian armies — depict Napoléon’s military campaigns.

Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel

The year 1806 — after France’s success at Austerliz — saw Napoléon at the height of his power. He also commissioned this triumphal arch, originally intended as a gate of honour to the Tuileries Palace, as well as a commemoration of his Grande Armée. Fontaine and Percier took inspiration once more from Rome, specifically from the Arch of Constantine. Atop the lovely arch, with its pink-marble Corinthian columns, they placed the horses of St Mark’s in Venice, which Napoléon had taken as a souvenir of his conquest of that city. The current horses are replicas, after the originals were returned in 1815 (along with much other stolen artwork).

Arc de Triomphe

In the same year, Napoléon commissioned this much larger arch, also in commemoration of his army, on the site of the old city gates. At the time, the Avenue des Champs-Élysées was little more than a country road on the outskirts of Paris. Since the destruction of the Palais des Tuileries, the Arc de Triomphe can be viewed from its little sister arch — they’re two bookends of a world-famous vista. The larger arch’s distance from the palace dictated its majestic size, for it needed to be admired from afar. Sadly, Napoléon didn’t get to see this particular dream materialise; the monument required several decades to reach completion. His ghost, however, would surely be happy that it is now a symbol of French pride and a focus of many civic celebrations, with the Flame of Remembrance burning brightly by the tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Église de la Madeleine

Napoléon, in 1806, also announced that the part-built church on this site would be redesigned and repurposed as a temple to the glory of the French army. Cue a rectangular Greco-Roman-style temple with a peristyle of Corinthian columns, styled à la Rome’s Pantheon. View it from the start of Rue Royale, then turn around to locate its twin monument on the other side of the river from Place de la Concorde; Napoléon had this Roman portico façade added to an old palace, Palais Bourbon, to reflect and amplify the overall effect of Classical grandeur on Place de la Concorde. That latter building is now the National Assembly, while the Madeleine has been a church since it was, finally, completed in 1842.

Musée du Louvre

The Louvre — the royal court until Louis XIV moved out to Versailles — found new life as a museum in 1793, which is rather astonishing because this was during some of most the tumultuous days of the Revolution. But it makes sense in the context of liberté and égalité, for it was, among other things, a way to share with everyday French citizens something that had, until now, been exclusive to high society.

Napoléon inspecting the works of Percier and Fontaine, painted by Auguste Couder.

Napoléon continued this mission of the Louvre as a place of art and beauty for all — also, he needed somewhere to store all of the art he had stolen on his various campaigns! (Like the horses atop the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel, most would eventually be returned to rightful owners; Veronese’s glorious Wedding Feast at Cana is one that remained at the Louvre.) Napoléon also decreed that it was high time to restore a neglected Louvre, and complete it with a northern wing — which was now an easier job, thanks to the various demolitions that followed the Rue Saint-Niçaise bombing attempt.

Ph: Konstik/Dreamstime

So Percier and Fontaine got to work on beautifying the Louvre in numerous ways, including completing the lovely Cour Carrée. (Much of their interior design no longer exists, but walk through the Salles Percier and Fontaine to admire their gorgeous Empire style.) They were in the midst of constructing the Louvre’s northern wing, which now houses the Musée des Arts Décoratifs (above), when Napoléon was defeated at Waterloo, necessitating a putting-down of tools. The Louvre would finally be completed during the reign of Napoléon’s nephew … although poignantly, the Tuileries Palace, which by now served as the western wing of the complex, burnt down the year after Napoléon III’s abdication.

Also Not-to-Miss for Napoléon Fans …

Debauve & Gallais (30 Rue des Saints-Pères, 75007) is the most historically significant chocolaterie in town, with a classified interior that dates back to its 1817 opening and was designed, no less, by Napoléon’s beloved Percier and Fontaine.

Le Procope (13 Rue de l’Ancienne Comédie, 75006), now a restaurant that serves classic Gallic fare in a glittering olde-worlde setting, was originally — from 1686 — one of Paris’s first cafés, and served coffee along with an inspiring ambience to its philosophically-minded clientele. As the Revolution brewed, the crowds became more politically activist; the now-national motto ‘Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité,’ is said to have been coined here. Napoléon, as an up-and-coming mover and shaker, was by this time a customer, albeit a poor one … One of his famous bicorne hats is on display in a glass cabinet (above), said to have been left here one day by the man himself, in lieu of paying his bill with money.

Le Grand Véfour (17 Rue de Beaujolais, 75001). When Napoléon finally did have money, this jewel box of a restaurant was a favoured dining spot of the imperial couple.

Ph: Mkojot/Dreamstime

While Napoléon’s downfall was brutal, his exile punishing, and his death lonely, his remains made a triumphant return to Paris in 1840. Watched by thousands of Parisians (who had fallen back in love with their former Emperor once more), the horse-drawn hearse made its way from the Arc de Triomphe (which had finally been completed in 1836) down to Place de la Concorde, and then over to Les Invalides, where his tomb still rests under the gilded dome; to visit, buy a ticket to the Musée de l’Armée.

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