(Redirected from Viollet le Duc)'Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc' (
January 27 1814 –
September 17,
1879) was a French
architect and theorist, famous for his restorations of
medieval buildings. Born in
Paris, he was as central a figure in the
Gothic Revival in France as he was in the public discourse on "honesty" in architecture, which eventually transcended all revival styles, to inform the moving spirit of
Modernism. Sir
John Summerson considered that "there have been two supremely eminent theorists in the history of European architecture—
Leon Battista Alberti and Eugène Viollet-le-Duc" (Summerson 1948).

Design for a concert hall, dated 1864, expressing Gothic principles in modern materials; brick, stone and cast iron. ''Entretiens sur l'architecture''
Early years
Viollet-le-Duc's father was a civil servant in Paris who collected books; his mother's Friday
salons drew
Stendhal and
Sainte-Beuve. His mother's brother,
Eugène Délécluze, "a painter in the mornings, a scholar in the evenings" (Summerson), was largely in charge of the young man's education. Viollet-le-Duc showed a lively intellect: republican, anti-clerical, rebellious, he built a barricade in the July
Revolution of 1830 and refused to enter the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Instead he opted in favor of direct practical experience in the architect’s office of
Jacques-Marie Huvé and of
François-René Leclèrc.
As an Architectural Restorer
Restoration work
In the early
1830s, the beginnings of a movement for the restoration of medieval buildings appeared in
France. Viollet-le-Duc, returning in 1835 from a study trip to
Italy, was ordered by
Prosper Merimée to restore the Romanesque abbey of
Vézelay. This work marked the beginning of a long series of restorations; Viollet-le-Duc's restorations at
Notre Dame de Paris brought him into national attention. His other main works include the Mont Saint Michel, Carcassonne, Roquetaillade castle and Pierrefonds.
Viollet-le-Duc applied the lessons he had derived from
Gothic architecture, seeing beneath the atmospheric allure that drew his British contemporaries to especially what he conceived of its rational structural systems, to modern building materials such as cast iron. He practiced as archaeologically precise (for his time) a style of restoration as he could manage, but his own designs were remarkably innovative. His approach to both medieval and modern architecture was severely rational, in keeping with his own unsentimental appreciation of the
Gothic achievement.
At the same time, in the cultural atmosphere of the
Second Empire theory necessarily became diluted in practice, and messages were mixed: Viollet-le-Duc provided a Gothic
reliquary for the relic of the
Crown of Thorns at Notre-Dame in 1862, and yet
Napoleon III also commissioned designs for a luxuriously appointed railway carriage from Viollet-le-Duc, in 14th-century Gothic style (Exhibition 1965).
'', A. Morel editor, Paris, 1868.]]
Among his restorations were:
★ Churches :
★
★ Sainte-Marie-Madeleine, Vézelay
★
★
Notre-Dame de Paris
★
★
Sainte-Chapelle, in Paris
★
★
Saint Denis Basilica, near Paris
★
★ Saint-Louis, in
Poissy, France
★
★ Semur
★
★ Saint-Nazaire, in
Carcassonne, France
★
★ Saint-Sernin, in
Toulouse, France
★
★ Notre-Dame de
Lausanne, Switzerland
★ Town Halls :
★
★ Saint-Antonin
★
★
Narbonne
★ Castles :
★
★
Roquetaillade, in Bordeaux
★
★
Pierrefonds
★
★ Fortified city of
Carcassonne
★
★
Château de Coucy
★
★
Antoing in Belgium
★
★
Château de Vincennes, Paris
Restoration of the
Château de Pierrefonds, reinterpreted by Viollet-le-Duc for
Napoleon III, was interrupted by the departure of the Emperor in
1870.
Influence on historic preservation
Basic intervention theories of
historic preservation are framed in the dualism of the retention of the status quo versus a "restoration" that creates something that never actually existed in the past.
John Ruskin was a strong proponent of the former sense, while his contemporary, Viollet-le-Duc, advocated for the latter instance. Viollet-le-Duc wrote that restoration is a "means to reestablish [a building] to a finished state, which may in fact never have actually existed at any given time."
[1] The type of restoration employed by Viollet-le-Duc was decried by John Ruskin as "a destruction out of which no remnants can be gathered: a destruction accompanied with false description of the thing destroyed."
[2]
This argument is still a current one when restoration is under consideration for a building or landscape. The past can never be faithfully recreated and in removing layers of history from a building, information and age value are also removed which can never be recreated.

The fortified city of
Carcassonne restored by Viollet-le-Duc
Legacy
Some of his restorations, such as that of the castle of
Pierrefonds, were highly controversial because they did not aim so much at accurately recreating a historical situation as much as at creating a "perfect building" of medieval style. Modern conservation practice finds Viollet-le-Duc's restorations too free, too personal, too interpretive, but many of the monuments he restored would have otherwise been lost.
The famous
Spanish architect
Antoni Gaudí was strongly influenced by the Gothic architecture revival of Viollet-le-Duc.
An exhibition, ''Eugène Viollet-le-Duc 1814-1879'' was presented in Paris, 1965.
Publications
Throughout his career Viollet-le-Duc made notes and drawings, not only for the buildings he was working on, but also on
Romanesque,
Gothic and
Renaissance buildings that were to be soon demolished. His notes were helpful in his published works. His study of medieval and Renaissance periods was not limited to architecture, but extended to furniture, clothing, musical instruments, armament and so forth.
All this work was published, first in serial, and then as full-scale books, as:
★ ''Dictionary of French Architecture from 11th to 16th Century'' (1854-1868) ('') - Original language edition, including numerous illustrations.
★ ''Dictionary of French Furnishings'' (1858-1870) (''Dictionnaire raisonné du mobilier français de l'époque Carolingienne à la Renaissance.'')
★ ''Entretiens sur l'architecture'' (in 2 volumes, 1858-72), in which Viollet-le-Duc systematized his approach to architecture and architectural education, in a system radically opposed to that of the ''
Ecole des Beaux-Arts'', which he had avoided in his youth and despised. In Henry Van Brunt's translation, the "Discourses on Architecture" was published in 1875, making it available to an American audience little more than a decade after its initial publication in France.
★ ''L'art russe: ses origines, ses elements constructifs,son apogée, son avenir'' (1877), where Viollet-le-Duc applied his ideas of rational construction onto Russian architecture.
Military career and influence
Viollet-le-Duc had a second career in the military, primarily in the defence of Paris during the
Franco-Prussian War (1870-1). He was so influenced by the conflict that during his later years he was moved to describe the idealised defence of France through the analogy of the military history of Le Roche-Pont, an imaginary castle, in his work ''Histoire d'une Forteresse'' (''Annals of a Fortress'', twice translated into English). Accessible and well researched, it bridges the line between novel and historical document.
''Annals of a Fortress'' strongly influenced French military defensive thinking. Viollet-le-Duc's critique of the effect of
artillery (applying his practical knowledge from the 1870-1 war) is so complete that it accurately describes the principles applied to the defence of France up to
World War II. The physical results of his theories are seen in the fortification of
Verdun prior to
The First World War and the
Maginot Line prior to WWII. In more depth his theories are reflected by the French military theory of "Deliberate Advance", where the artillery and a strong shield of
fortresses in the rear of an army are key.
Later life
In his old age, Viollet-le-Duc moved to
Lausanne,
Switzerland, where he constructed a villa (since destroyed). He died there in 1879.
Notes
1. Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc. ([1854] 1990). ''The foundations of architecture''. New York: George Braziller. P. 195. (Translated by Kenneth D. Whitehead from the original French.)
2. John Ruskin. ([1880] 1989). ''The seven lamps of architecture''. New York: Dover Publications. P. 194
References
★
Summerson, Sir John, 1948. "Viollet-le-Duc and the rational point of view" collected in ''Heavenly Mansions and Other essays on Architecture.''
★
''Dictionary of Art Historians'': Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc
Restorations
Vezelais,
Carcasonne,
Chateau de Roquetaillade.