Download
Size:- 862 MB (4096×2304)
CONNAÎTRE L’ARC DE TRIOMPHE
Un point de vue unique. Du haut de la terrasse panoramique, le regard embrasse tout Paris.
L’antique revisité. L’architecte Jean-François Chalgrin s’inspire de l’arc romain de Titus à arche unique, mais s’en émancipe par des dimensions exceptionnelles (environ 50 m de hauteur, 45 m de longueur et 22 m de largeur) et l’abandon des colonnes.
Un haut lieu des grandes manifestations nationales. Souhaité par Napoléon Ier dès 1806, l’Arc de triomphe est inauguré en 1836 par le roi des Français, Louis-Philippe, qui le dédie aux armées de la Révolution et de l’Empire. Le Soldat inconnu est inhumé sur le terre-plein en 1921. La flamme du souvenir est ravivée tous les jours à 18h30.
******************
At the base of the Arch de Triomphe stands a torch. Every evening at 6:30 P.M. it is rekindled, and veterans lay wreaths decorated with red, white and blue near its flickering flame. It burns in the darkness to recall the sacrifice of an unknown French soldier who gave his life during World War I.
The idea for an unknown soldier to be honored in death in France was first initiated in 1916 while World War I was still being fought and the outcome in certain doubt. On November 12, 1919, a year and a day after the end of World War I, the concept was given formal recognition and it was determined that the Unknown Soldier would be laid to rest at the Pantheon. (The Pantheon is a famous Neoclassical building in Paris that contains the remains of some of France’s most famous citizens and leaders.)
The following year, after a large-scale letter writing campaign, it was finally determined that the Unknown Soldier would be buried at the base of the Arc de Triomphe. The legislation authorizing the memorial, passed unanimously, stated:
On November 10, 1920 at the Citadel of Verdun, Auguste Thien reviewed eight identical coffins, each bearing the remains of an unknown French soldier who had been killed during the Great War. Thien selected the sixth of the eight coffins, which was transported to Paris to rest in the chapel on the first floor of the Arc de Triomphe. There the coffin remained until January 28, 1921 at which time the Unknown French soldier was laid in his permanent place of honor at the base of the Arc de Triomphe.
On October 22, 1922 the French Parliament declared the eleventh day of November in each year to be a national holiday. The following year on November 11, 1923 Andre Maginot, French Minister for War, lit the eternal flame for the first time. Since that date it has become the duty of the Committee of the Flame to rekindle that torch each evening at twilight.
