Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Commemorative column known as the July Column à Paris 1er dans Paris 4ème

Patrimoine classé
Colonne commémorative
Paris

Commemorative column known as the July Column

    Place de la Bastille
    75004 Paris 4e Arrondissement
Colonne de Juillet - Paris 4ème
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Colonne commémorative dite Colonne de Juillet
Crédit photo : Vassil - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Antiquité
Haut Moyen Âge
Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
0
100
1700
1800
1900
2000
27-29 juillet 1830
Three Glory
1792-1793
Regeneration Fountain
1808-1814
Napoleon's elephant project
6 juillet 1831
Royal Ordinance
27 juillet 1831
Laying the first stone
1835-1840
Column construction
28 juillet 1840
Inauguration
25 février 1848
Burning of the throne of Louis-Philippe
1871
Paris municipality
29 septembre 1995
Historical monument classification
2018-2021
Restoration and partial reopening
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The column, including underground funeral facilities, basements, fences, and small adjoining entrance pavilions (Box 2). not cadastred): classification by order of 29 September 1995

Key figures

Louis-Philippe Ier - King of the French (1830-1848) Commandant of the column.
Jean-Antoine Alavoine - Architect Initial designer, dead before completion.
Joseph-Louis Duc - Architect Finished the column after Alonas.
Auguste Dumont - Sculptor Author of the "Genie de la Liberté".
Hector Berlioz - Composer Great symphony for the inauguration.
Antoine-Louis Barye - Sculptor Author of bronze lions.
Jacques-Louis David - Painter and sculptor Designer of the fountain of 1793.
Charles X - King of France (1824-1830) Reversed during the Three Glories.

Origin and history

The July column, located in Place de la Bastille in Paris, was erected between 1835 and 1840 to commemorate the Three Glories (27-29 July 1830), a revolution that overthrew Charles X and established the July monarchy under Louis-Philippe I. The monument, inspired by the Trajane column, was designed by Jean-Antoine Alavoine and completed by Joseph-Louis Duc after his death. Its bronze barrel bears the names of the 504 victims of 1830, while its top is decorated with the Genie de la Liberté (1839), sculpture by Auguste Dumont symbolizing freedom breaking its chains.

The base of the column, built on the unfinished foundations of the fountain of the Napoleonic Elephant (1808-1814), houses a necropolis containing the remains of the revolutionaries of 1830, transferred from the Jardin de l'Infante, as well as 196 victims of the riots of 1848. The monument was inaugurated on 28 July 1840 with a grandiose ceremony including the Great Funeral and triumphal symphony of Hector Berlioz, led by the composer himself. The column, 50.52 meters high, became a major republican symbol, especially during the Paris Commune (1871), where it was a gathering place despite attempts at lenient destruction.

Ranked a historic monument in 1995, the column underwent restorations, one in 2018-2021 allowing the partial opening of its bases to the public. However, full access (240 steps) is still prohibited for security reasons. The Genie de la Liberté, reproduced on the ten-franc coin (1988-2001) and copied for the Columna de la Independencia in Mexico (1910), embodies the revolutionary legacy of the monument. The column replaces several aborted projects, such as the Elephant of the Bastille (a plaster maquette destroyed in 1846) or the Regeneration Fountain (1793), symbol of revolutionary festivals.

During the revolution of 1848, the throne of Louis-Philippe was burned at his feet, and 196 new bodies were buried there. Under the Commune, the Place de la Bastille and its column became a stronghold of the federated, although controversial sources evoke an attempt at destruction by explosives carried through the Saint Martin Canal. Today, the monument, served by the metro Bastille, remains a central place of memory in French political history, mixing art, architecture and republican symbolism.

Artists associated with the column include Jacques-Louis David (Fontaine de la Régeneration), Antoine-Louis Barye (Lion sculptures), and Auguste Dumont (Genie de la Liberté). Significant anecdotes include suicides from its peak (from 1841) or its appearance in works such as Victor Hugo's Les Misérables, where Gavroche lives in the plaster elephant. The basement, crossing the Canal Saint-Martin, also mistakenly houses Egyptian mummies transferred from the Louvre.

External links