 Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel |
 Central bas-relief under the main arch of the ''Arc du Carrousel'' |
The 'Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel' () is a
triumphal arch in
Paris,
France. It is located on the Place du Carrousel, just to the west of the
Louvre.
Designed by
Charles Percier and Pierre Léonard Fontaine, the arch was built between
1806-
1808 by the Emperor
Napoleon I on the model of the
Arch of Septimius Severus in
Rome. It was commissioned to commemorate France's military victories in
1805. It was originally surmounted by
the famous horses of
Saint Mark's Cathedral in
Venice, captured by Napoleon, but these were returned there in
1815. They were replaced by a
quadriga sculpted by Baron
François Joseph Bosio, depicting Peace riding in a triumphal chariot, led by gilded Victories on either side; the composition commemorates the
Restoration of the Bourbons following Napoleon's downfall.
The high arch is flanked by two smaller ones. Around its exterior are eight
Corinthian columns of granite, topped by eight soldiers of the Empire. In the attic between the soldiers, bas-reliefs depict:
★ the Arms of the
Kingdom of Italy with figures representing History and the Arts;
★ the Arms of the
French Empire with Victory, Fame, History and Abundance
★ Wisdom and Strength holding the arms of the Kingdom of Italy, accompanied by Prudence and Victory.
Napoleon's diplomatic and military victories are commemorated by
bas-reliefs executed in rose marble, depicting the
Peace of Pressburg, Napoleon entering
Munich, Napoleon entering
Vienna, the
Battle of Austerlitz, the
Tilsit Conference, and the surrender of
Ulm. Reliefs also decorate the arches.
The Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel is at the easternmost end of the so-called "
Axe historique" ("grand historic axis") of Paris, a nine-kilometre long linear route which dominates central and western Paris. Looking westwards, the arch is perfectly aligned with the obelisk in the
Place de la Concorde, the
Champs-Élysées, the
Arc de Triomphe and (although it is not directly visible from the Place du Carrousel) the
Grande Arche de la Defense. The axis thus begins and ends with an arch today. At the time the Arc du Carrousel was built, however, ''Place du Carrousel'' fronted the central block of the
Palace of the Tuileries, whose long range blocked off the axial view, which originally began from the Tuileries' central garden axis on the farther, west-facing side. When the Tuileries Palace was burnt down in the
Paris Commune of 1870 and its ruins swept away, the present great axis was opened.
External links
★
Carrousel Garden