Erection of the monument 1922 (≈ 1922)
Installation in front of Saint-Philippe Church (Philippeville).
1926
Official Inauguration
Official Inauguration 1926 (≈ 1926)
Ceremony in Philippeville (Algeria).
1962
Repatriation to France
Repatriation to France 1962 (≈ 1962)
Demountation and transfer to Toulouse.
17 septembre 2019
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 17 septembre 2019 (≈ 2019)
Protection of the high relief in bronze.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
The bronze high relief, in total, carved by Camille Alaphilippe, located in the cemetery of Salonique, rue de la Colonne, as delimited in red on the plan annexed to the decree (cad. 834 AS not cadastre): inscription by order of 17 September 2019
Key figures
Camille Alaphilippe - Sculptor
Author of the bronze high relief.
Origin and history
The Monument to the dead of Philippeville was erected in 1922 in front of the church of Saint-Philippe in Philippeville (now Skikda, Algeria), then department of Constantine. Designed by sculptor Camille Alaphilippe, it represents a winged Victoire surrounded by soldiers, including "indigenous troops", with details such as horses and camels. The marble plates, copied during repatriation, list 478 soldiers from Philippeville and 66 others from the neighbouring communes (El-Arrouch, Gastonville, etc.).
Inaugurated in 1926, the monument was dismantled after Algeria's independence in 1962. The central bronze decoration and commemorative plates were transported by boat to Toulouse, a twin town with Philippeville via the Haute-Garonne. Recomposed in the cemetery of Salonique (annex of Terre-Cabade), he faces the crypt of the 1,706 hairy, highlighting his role as a memorial shared between France and Algeria.
Ranked a historic monument on September 17, 2019, this high relief is part of a series of 42 protected dead monuments in Occitanie since 2018. Its allegorical style and its migratory history bear witness to the post-colonial ties and the memory of the Great War. The protected elements include only the bronze of Camille Alaphilippe, now owned by the commune of Toulouse.
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