PèRE LACHAISE CEMETERY

(Redirected from Le Père Lachaise Cemetery)
Looking down the hill at Père-Lachaise.

'Père-Lachaise Cemetery' (French: ''Cimetière du Père-Lachaise'') (officially, ''cimetière de l'Est'' “eastern cemetery”) is the largest cemetery in the city of Paris, France at 118 acres (48 ha), although there are larger cemeteries in Paris suburbs.
Père-Lachaise is one of the most famous cemeteries in the world. Located in the 20e ''arrondissement'', it is reputed to be the world's most-visited cemetery, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors annually to the graves of those who have enhanced French life over the past 200 years. It is also the site of three Great War memorials.
Père-Lachaise is located on Boulevard de Ménilmontant. Métro station Philippe Auguste on line 2 is next to the main entrance, while the station called Père Lachaise, on lines 2 or 3, is 500 metres away near a side entrance. (Many tourists are reported to prefer the Gambetta station on line 3 as it allows them to enter near the tomb of Oscar Wilde and go downhill to visit the rest of the cemetery.)

Contents
Origins
Burials at Père-Lachaise
Gallery
References
External links

Origins


The cemetery takes its name from Père François de la Chaise (1624-1709), confessor to Louis XIV, who lived in the Jesuit house rebuilt in 1682 on the site of the chapel. The property, situated on the hillside (from which the king, during the Fronde, watched skirmishing between the Condé and Turenne) was bought by the city in 1804, laid out by Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart, and later extended.
The cemetery was established by Napoleon in 1804. Cemeteries had been banned inside Paris in 1786, after the closure of the ''Cimetière des Innocents'' on the fringe of ''Les Halles'' food market, on the grounds that it presented a health hazard. (This same health hazard also led to the creation of the famous Parisian catacombs in the south of the city). Several new cemeteries replaced all the Parisian ones, outside the precincts of the capital, Montmartre Cemetery in the north, Père-Lachaise in the east, and Montparnasse Cemetery in the south. At the heart of the city, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower, is Passy Cemetery.

At the time of its opening, the cemetery was seen as too far from the city and attracted few funerals. So the administrators devised a marketing strategy and with great fanfare organised the transfer of the remains of La Fontaine and Molière, in 1804. Then, in another great spectacle in 1817, the purported remains of Pierre Abélard and Héloïse were also transferred to the cemetery with their monument's canopy made from fragments of the abbey of Nogent-sur-Seine (by tradition, lovers or lovelorn singles leave letters at the crypt in tribute to the couple or in hope of finding true love) (see disputation).
This strategy had the desired effect when people began clamouring to be buried among the famous citizens. Records show that, within a few years, Père-Lachaise went from a few dozen permanent residents to more than 33,000. Today there are over 300,000 bodies buried there, and many more in the columbarium, which holds the remains of those who had requested cremation.
The Communards' Wall (''Mur des Fédérés'') is also located in the cemetery. This is the site where 147 Communards, the last defenders of the workers' district Belleville, were shot on Sunday, 28 May, 1871 — the last day of the "Bloody Week" (''Semaine Sanglante'') ending the Paris Commune.
The monument honouring the French Brigadists.

Since that execution, Père Lachaise gained a special emotive role for the political "left" in France, manifested in annual processions sometimes drawing tens or even or hundreds of thousands of participants (some 600,000 in 1936) and led by the main leaders of the left parties and organizations (see article on the Communards' Wall).
Various prominent left-wing leaders are buried in the vicinity, where a monument was also erected honouring the French Brigadists (volunteers in the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War).

Burials at Père-Lachaise


:''See also:

Miguel Ángel Asturias — Guatemalan diplomat and author, Nobel Prize in Literature 1967

Jean-Pierre Aumont — actor, father of Tina Aumont and husband of Maria Montez.

Honoré de Balzac — great French novelist of the 19th century.

Claude Bernard — Famous French physiologist, known for several advances in medicine, as the introduction of the scientific method to the study of medicine, and the study of the sympathetic nervous system.

Judah P. Benjamin — 19th Century American lawyer who served in the Governments of the United States of America and the Confederate States of America before fleeing to England after the end of the War Between the States/American Civil War, qualifying as a barrister and later Queen's Counsel, dying in Paris

Sarah Bernhardt — famous French stage and film actress.

Georges Bizet — French composer and conductor.

Sophie Blanchard — first professional female balloonist and the first woman to die in an aviation accident.

Rosa Bonheur — famous 19th century French animal painter.

Gustave Caillebotte — French Impressionist painter.

Maria Callas — The opera singer's ashes were originally buried in the cemetery. After being stolen and later recovered, they were scattered into the Aegean Sea, off the coast of Greece. The empty urn remains in Père Lachaise.

Jean-Joseph Carriès — sculptor, ceramist, and miniaturist.

Jean-François Champollion — decipher of the hieroglyphs and father of the Egyptology.

Frédéric ChopinPolish composer. His heart is entombed within a pillar at the Holy Cross Church in Warsaw, Poland.

Auguste Comte — French thinker; father of Positivism.

Nancy Cunard — English poet, writer, anarchist activist.

Jarosław Dąbrowski — exiled Polish revolutionary Nationalist and last Commander-in-Chief of the Paris Commune of 1871.

Édouard Daladier — French Radical-Socialist politician of the 1930s, signatory of the Munich Agreement in 1938 and Prime Minister of France at the outbreak of the Second World War.

Jacques-Louis David — Napoleon's court painter was exiled as a revolutionary after the Bourbons returned to the throne of France. His body was not allowed into the country even in death, so the tomb contains only his heart.

Jean de Brunhoff — Author of ''Babar the Elephant''.

Eugène Delacroix — the great Romantic artist.

Edmond James de Rothschild — Baron of the Rothschild family.

Pierre Desproges — French humorist.

Antonio Drove — director

Isadora Duncan — American dancer

George EnescuRomanian composer, pianist, violinist and conductor, buried in 1955.

Suzanne Flon — actress

Thierry Fortineau — actor

Joseph Fourier — French mathematician and physicist

Théodore Gericault — the Romantic painter, whose major work ''The Raft of the Medusa'' is reproduced on his tomb.

Zenobe Gramme — Inventor of the Direct Current (DC) Dynamo. There is a statue on the grave of Zenobe sitting and looking at a dynamo rotor.

Stéphane Grappelli — French jazz violinist and member of the Quintette du Hot Club de France

Yılmaz Güney,Turkish actor

Samuel Hahnemann — German physician, formal founder of homeopathy.

Sadegh Hedayat — was Iran's foremost modern writer of prose fiction and short stories.

Ticky Holgado, actor

Claude Jade, actress

Allan Kardec — Born Hippolyte Leon Denizard Rivail, he was the founder of Spiritism.

Ahmet Kaya — Turkish Kurdish singer and songwriter

Clarence John Laughlin — American Surrealist photographer from New Orleans, Louisiana. His most famous published work was "Ghosts Along the Mississippi".

Georges Méliès— French filmmaker; maker of A Trip to the Moon.

Charles Messier — French astronomer, publisher of Messier's catalogue.

Yves Montand — film actor

Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy Tataaviation pioneer and important Indian businessman.

Jim Morrison — American singer and songwriter with The Doors, author, and poet. Permanent crowds and occasional vandalism surrounding this tomb have caused tensions with the families of other, less famous, deceased. The cemetery has been forced to hire a full-time security guard for the grave. Many other parts of the cemetery have been defaced with arrows purporting to indicate the direction toward "Jim", though even these defacements have in many cases been defaced themselves, resulting in arrows that point in two directions.

Jean Moulin - founder and unifier of the French Resistance in WWII, went missing after his arrest with several other Resistants at Caluire, Lyon in June 1943. Understood to have died on a train not far from Metz station in July that year, ashes 'presumed' to be his were interred at Pere Lachaise after the war and then transferred to the Pantheon in December 1964.

Nadar (Gaspard-Félix Tournachon) , a French photographer, caricaturist, journalist, novelist and balloonist.

Gérard de Nerval — French poet.

Michel Ney — marshal of the French army who fought in the French Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars.

Louis Nicolas DavoutNapoleon's undefeated "Iron Marshal."

Victor Noir — journalist killed by Pierre Napoleon Bonaparte in a dispute over a duel with Paschal Grousset. The tomb, designed by Jules Dalou is notable for the realistic portrayal of the dead Noir, and for the fact that he appears to be at least partially sexually aroused, his large penis pushing his part-unbuttoned fly open. In consequence, the sculpture has become a fertility symbol. His lips are kissed, the genital area is rubbed and flowers are left in his hat. In 2005 a fence was erected around his tomb to prevent people rubbing said area, as this was damaging the sculpture, but it has subsequently been removed.
The grave of Édith Piaf


Virginia Oldoini, Countess of Castiglione — famous Italian courtesan

Michel Petrucciani — French Jazz pianist.

Édith Piaf — famous French singer.

Camille Pissarro — French Impressionist painter.

Elvira PopescuRomanian-born actress

Marcel Proust — French intellectual, novelist, essayist and critic.

Gioacchino RossiniItalian composer. In 1887, Rossini's remains were moved back to Florence, but the crypt that once housed them (now dedicated to his memory) is still in Perè Lachaise.

★ Countess Consuelo de Saint-Exupéry — The Salvadoran writer who was married to Comte Antoine de Saint-Exupéry who is the author of ''The Little Prince'' (''Le Petit Prince'').

Claude Henri de Rouvroy, Comte de Saint-Simon — Famous sociologist who founded the "Saint-Simonian" movement

Georges-Pierre Seurat — French painter of ''Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte'', and father of neoimpressionism.

Simone Signoret — Academy-award winning French actress.

William Sidney Smith, British admiral of whom Napoleon Bonaparte said, "That man made me miss my destiny".

Gerda Taro — (real name Gerda Pohorylles; 1911 - Spain 1937) was a German war photographer the great love of Robert Capa, also one of the iconographers of the Spanish Civil War. Tomb monument by Alberto Giacometti.

Isaac Titsingh — Dutch surgeon, scholar, VOC trader, ambassador to Qing China and Tokugawa Japan

Alice B. Toklas — American author, partner of Gertrude Stein, Toklas's name and information is etched on the other side of Stein's gravestone in the same sparse style and font. As they were inseparable in life, so too are they in death.

Louis Verneuil — French playwright.

Marie, Countess Walewski — Napoleon's mistress, credited for persuading Napoleon to take important pro-Polish decisions during the Napoleonic Wars. Only her heart is entombed here; her other remains were returned to her native Poland.

Eduard WiiraltEstonian artist

Oscar WildeIrish novelist, poet and playwright. By tradition, Wilde's admirers kiss the art-deco monument while wearing lipstick.

Richard WrightAfrican-American author, wrote ''Native Son'' and other American classics.

Jean Valjean — fictional character in Victor Hugo's Les Misérables

Dominique Vivant, Baron de Denon — French artist, writer, diplomat and archaeologist. Located close to Frederick Chopin's grave.

Nestor Makhno — an anarcho-communist Ukrainian revolutionary

Leo VI Lusignian- last king of Cilician Armenia.

Karel Appel — Dutch painter.

Gallery





References


#NY Times article

External links



a literary visit in PL

Père-Lachaise Cemetery - virtual tour in French and English

Cimetière du Père-Lachaise

Video about Père-Lachaise Cemetery and Belleville

Photographs of Cimetière du Père-Lachaise

Sensuality revealed by the funerary sculpture in Père-Lachaise Cemetery

Cimetière du Père-Lachaise - current photographs

Information and news about Père-Lachaise In English

Photographs of Père-Lachaise Documenting funerary statuary in Paris cemeteries; on pariscemeteries.com

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