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Lion of Belfort en Territoire de Belfort

Patrimoine classé
Monument
Territoire

Lion of Belfort

    Allée du Souvenir Français
    90000 Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Lion de Belfort
Crédit photo : Thomas Bresson - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1870–1871
Belfort Headquarters
5 décembre 1871
Project launch
1875–1879
Construction of the monument
28 août 1880
Illumination by Bartholdi
1890
Adding dedication
20 avril 1931
Historical monument classification
2019
Major restoration
2020
French favorite monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Lion carved by Bartholdi: ranking by decree of 20 April 1931

Key figures

Auguste Bartholdi - Sculptor Author of the Lion, inspired by Lucerne.
Colonel Denfert-Rochereau - Defender of Belfort Directed the resistance during the seat.
Édouard Meny - Mayor of Belfort The project was launched in 1871.
Jean-Léon Gérôme - Mentor by Bartholdi Inspired Egyptian gigantism.
Otto von Bismarck - German Chancellor Influenced the lion's orientation.

Origin and history

The Lion of Belfort is a memorial in pink sandstone carved by Auguste Bartholdi between 1875 and 1879, at the request of the city to honour its resistance during the Prussian siege of 1870-1871. This 22-metre-long high relief, backed by the cliff of the citadel, represents a wounded but proud lion, symbolizing the energy of the Belfortans. The broken arrow under his leg points towards the enemy, while his head, facing west, expresses a disdain calculated to appease the diplomatic tensions of the time.

The project, launched in 1871 by Mayor Édouard Meny, was marked by technical challenges and conflicts with Bartholdi, including funding. Initially planned in white limestone, the lion was finally carved in sandstone of the Vosges, assembled block by block on a furnished terrace. Despite the absence of official inauguration due to disagreements, Bartholdi organized a spectacular illumination in 1880. The monument, classified in 1931, became the emblem of Belfort, nicknamed the "Cité du Lion".

Inspired by the Lion of Lucerne and Egyptian sculptures, Bartholdi studied felines at the Jardin des Plantes to create this allegory of resistance. The lion, turned west to avoid causing Bismarckian Germany, embodies a defeat transformed into a symbol of pride. Its base bears the inscription "To the defenders of Belfort 1870–71", added in 1890 thanks to an subscription of the Alpine Club. Small replicas exist in Paris (place Denfert-Rochereau) and Montreal.

The posterity of the monument was immediate: reproduced on postcards, advertising objects or hijacked by artists like Max Ernst, it was the subject of proceedings for forgery during his lifetime. Ranked a historic monument in 1931, it was restored in 2019 to its original color. In 2020, it was sacred "Favourite Monument of the French". Its centenary in 1981 and 130th anniversary in 2011 gave rise to major celebrations, attracting thousands of visitors.

Several legends surround the work, such as that of a missing language that led Bartholdi to suicide – reversed by the 2019 restoration and medical archives. The lion, with its arrow directed eastward, recalls the 103 days of siege led by Colonel Denfert-Rochereau, whose Parisian replica honours memory. The pink sandstone, chosen despite the initial protests, gives it a unique patina, strengthening its status as a local and national icon.

External links