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Facets of French Heritage: Selling the Crown Jewels in the Early Third Republic
Author(s) -
Tom Stammers
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of modern history
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.18
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1537-5358
pISSN - 0022-2801
DOI - 10.1086/695884
Subject(s) - crown (dentistry) , download , history , art , political science , classics , art history , medicine , computer science , world wide web , dentistry
The construction of a national heritage in France has often been described in heroic tones. It was built around a series of critical legislative milestones, from the campaign against vandalism launched byAbbéGrégoire in the 1790s, through thework of the Commission desMonuments Historiques from the 1830s, and culminating in the protection of urban ensembles provided under the loi Malraux (named after the minister who did so much to popularize the noun patrimoine in the 1960s). According to this story of progressive enlightenment, France became the laboratory for heritage initiatives in response to the shock of 1789. In its desire to smash outworn institutions and relocate authority not in historic precedent but in the immutable laws of nature and human reason, the French Revolution succeeded in making the preservation of the past an urgent political conundrum. Just as the creation of the Louvre has been hailed as the birth of modern museology, so too the bureaucratic instruments devised for sifting and inventorying objects reappropriated from the crown, the church, and the émigrés have been acclaimed for placing the postrevolutionary heritage on a scientific footing. During “le moment Guizot” in the 1830s, the task of conservation was increasingly professionalized, awarded to bourgeois capacités, such as scholars and architects,

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