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The Bloodbath of the Paris Commune

  When you take a guided tour in France—whether it is a Loire château, or any other building erected before 1789—inevitably, there comes the time when the guide says: “Unfortunately, during the...

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The Truth About La Marseillaise

  Eugène Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People, 1830. As seen here, men can lose their pants when they are led by a woman with a relaxed sartorial attitude.   It’s the Fourteenth of July today, the...

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Loulou and the Zulus: The Life and Death of Napoleon IV

  Napoleon III and his family   Napoleon the Fourth? Was there ever such an emperor? Strangely enough, the Zulus in South Africa can tell you more about this personage than an average Frenchman. The...

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The English Courtesan Who Made a French Emperor

It takes a lot of effort to become an emperor. First, you have to believe in yourself and your star, which is easy when you are a nephew of the Great Corsican and the heir to his fallen throne. But you...

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Bois de Boulogne: The Rendezvous of Wealth and Opulence

 Carriages returning from a Sunday parade in the Bois   A previous post described the random free spectacles of the Paris streets. The largest and most ostentatious free show had a steady schedule....

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La Castiglione: The Too Much Countess

“I equal the highest-born ladies with my birth, I surpass them with my beauty, and I judge them with my mind.” Thus spoke Virginia Oldoïni, Countess of Castiglione, who was convinced that she was the...

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The Gallery of Achievers

This blog has quietly passed the 10-year anniversary. We met many remarkable personalities along the way, and I want to recall some of them in this post. Not all were paragons of virtue, but they were...

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Les Halles: The Belly of Paris

. Les Halles were the commercial heart of Paris, a place of exchange and supply to the abundant life that had developed over the centuries. An entire chapter in Paris history was closed in 1971 with...

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Why Victorian Paris?

pause The recent unrest across France reminded me why this blog could not be called anything other than Victorian Paris. I remember one reader objecting to the title, asking what had Victoria to do...

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The Prince of Wales in Paris: “Please, adopt me!”

The year is 1855 and a procession of luxury carriages crosses Paris. An enthusiastic crowd lining the boulevards greets Queen Victoria with her husband Prince Albert in the company of the French...

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