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Monument to the Dead of War1914-1918 à Saint-Astier en Dordogne

Dordogne

Monument to the Dead of War1914-1918

    10 Place du 14 Juillet
    24110 Saint-Astier
Monument aux morts de la guerre1914-1918
Monument aux morts de la guerre1914-1918
Monument aux morts de la guerre1914-1918
Crédit photo : Père Igor - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1920-1922
Construction of the monument
21 octobre 2014
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The monument to the dead in total, with its garden and gate (not cadastre, public domain, cf plan annexed to the decree): inscription by decree of 21 October 2014

Key figures

A. Prodolliet - Architect Designer of the monument to the dead.
A. Pugnet - Sculptor Author of carved elements.

Origin and history

The monument to the dead of Saint-Astier was built between 1920 and 1922 to honour the soldiers of the First World War. Designed by architect A. Prodolliet and carved by A. Pugnet, it integrates into the retaining wall of the Victory Square, symbolically linking the two parts of the city. Its structure consists of a column flanked by rectangular foothills, surmounted by a stylized funeral urn, reflecting postwar commemorative aesthetics.

Classified as a Historic Monument since 2014, this monument also includes its garden and gate, all located on the public domain. Its location, at the corner of the square, makes it a central point of local memory. The accuracy of its location is considered satisfactory a priori (note 6/10), and there remains an architectural testimony of the tributes given to the victims of the conflict in the small French communes.

The work is part of a national context of reconstruction and mourning, where monuments to the dead became places of assembly and remembrance. In Saint-Astier, as elsewhere in the Dordogne, these buildings played a major social role, marking the urban space while honoring the sacrifices of the inhabitants. Their style, often sober and symbolic, was intended to convey a collective emotion rather than to celebrate a military victory.

External links