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Sam Solomon
3.11.00
Birth
of Modern Europe
Paris Essay on Physical Evolution
The history
of physical improvements in Paris during the Bourbon dynasty (1589-1792)
is one of glory for the aristocracy and squalor for the masses.
The city was originally founded c. 360 on the Ile de la Cité,
an island in the Seine river, soon spreading onto the left and right
banks of the river; from its foundation Paris’s drastic class divisions
were illustrated clearly by the city’s structure and evolution.
The Bourbon monarchs, centered in Paris, made few to no efforts
to improve the living conditions of the Parisian working class,
instead creating grand public spaces in their honor and new aristocratic
palaces as playgrounds. The sanitation and transportation for the
majority of Parisians was disgracefully inadequate, while the aristocracy
and upper bourgeoisie enjoyed beautiful public spaces as well as
huge palaces, gardens, and mansions. The goal of urban improvements
was clearly to glorify the power of the ruling class and disregarded
the needs of the people.
The living
conditions in Paris prior to and during the Bourbon dynasty were
deplorable. The streets housed filth unimaginable to the modern
urban citizen; “tout-a-la-rue”, or all in the street, was the rule
for household as well as human waste(even fetuses!).[1]
This naturally created a horrible stench which was a fact
of life for Parisian citizens; it also was extremely unsanitary
and helped to spread diseases such as the Plague. The few existing
sewers either emptied into the Seine, as did most chemicals from
farms and carcasses from Butchers and Tanneries, or they carried
the refuse aimlessly down the streets.[2]
Thus the streets, as well as
the Seine, became the source of diseases and odors which undoubtedly
affected the quality of everyday life for Parisians. Aside from the
issue of health, the physical presence of garbage made many streets
unnavigable.[3]
This was, however, hardly the only impediment to transportation.
The vast majority of Parisian streets were built during the medieval
period and were accordingly crooked, narrow, and poorly paved (if
paved at all). There were few avenues of significance to make commuting
easier and the city might have seemed to a foreigner or small child
rather like a maze. Life for the working class was malodorous, inconvenient,
disease ridden, and generally filthy.
The Bourbon
monarchs did little to nothing to remedy the poor sanitary conditions
of Paris. On the contrary, many demonstrated indifference to the
situation as long as it did not directly affect them. The ordinances
and decrees which they did enact were poorly reinforced and did
not come close to meeting the need for new sewers and sufficient
sanitation workers. An example of the indifference of these kings
to sanitary issues is Louis XIII, who went so far as to pocket the
taxes on wine set aside for sewer repair.[4]
Although the
Bourbon monarchs did not improve the sanitary conditions of Paris,
they did significantly alter the physical appearance of the city.
They spent immense sums of money on palaces and country estates.
The most significant example of excessive spending by a Bourbon
King on private accommodations is Versailles. Located several
miles south-west of Paris, this palace was originally created as
a small brick building by Louis XIII. Louis XIV(1643-1715) transformed
it into a huge palace, over a quarter mile long. In addition, he
built an immense formal garden and park, creating an axis between
Paris and the palace. He even went so far as to construct a beautiful
village to give Versailles more appeal to the foreign nobility
and to demonstrate further what a king could do if given absolute
power. This palace not only used up funds which might have benefited
the working class, but also physically separated the monarchy from
the people; this isolation intensified the absolute power of the
Bourbon kings.
In addition
to Versailles, the Bourbon kings began a process of superficial
improvements to Paris, exerting their absolute power to create majestic
public spaces in their own honor. Prior to 1600, Paris had few public
spaces of significance. The aristocracy had always had huge, fancy
palaces such as the Louvre, and other private spaces, but
these were off limits to the average Parisian both legally and physically.
The new spaces included a few avenues and places. The main
avenue created was the Champs Élyseés, which extended westward
from the new Tuileries palace and garden (the center of the
monarchy before Versailles) and began a general western expansion
using it as an axis. Another change was the evolution of medieval
city walls into the Grands Boulevards, planted walks surrounding
the city and giving rise to cafés, restaurants, and theaters.[5] Perhaps the most significant
change in the city was the creation of places. These geometric
spaces were usually surrounded by regular streets and had fancy
residential buildings around their edges. They also included equestrian
statues or obelisks to symbolize the greatness of the monarchy.
The places were open to all but served primarily to serve
as testaments to the power of the kings. Some examples are the
Place des Vosges (1605-12), Place Vendome (1670-1720),
and Place de Victoires (1687).[6] In addition
to these enclosed spaces was the Place de la Concorde (building
begun in 1755), part of a number of extensions to the Champs
Élyseés. This space was constructed in honor of Louis XV, who
held a contest for architects to design a place in his honor.
The sites suggested were all around the city in key locations, each
of which would mean the destruction of existing structures and indicated
the King’s desire to exert his power over the city.
Although the
creation of beautiful spaces was an improvement per se, it did practically
nothing to improve the quality of life for the vast majority of
Parisians and was a blatant abuse of the monarchy’s absolute power.
Versailles was, without doubt, an exercise of excessive power
and a waste of funds which might have gone to sanitation or the
modernization of roads. The places are more difficult to
qualify; some might argue that they had democratizing effects.
While it is true that they were open to the public, their original
purpose of glorifying the monarchy is hardly democratic. In addition,
they could be fully enjoyed only by the aristocracy and upper bourgeoisie,
who had leisure time to spend. The working classes were not able
to stroll when they pleased; they were laboring most of the day.
Even when had free time, the lower classes could not practically
shop at the expensive new stores or enjoy the theatres by the boulevards
and places. And while the Bourbon kings spent huge sums
of money on these spaces, the large part of the city was still as
it had been in medieval times. Simple, wide avenues were needed
desperately within the existing parts of the city, not leading off
to nowhere as did the Champs Élyseés , or bordering the city
like the Grands Boulevards. Perhaps less posh places
or low income apartments would have allowed for the possibility
of jobs and social mobility for the working classes instead of serving
only to please the richest citizens and attest to the power of the
kings.
In conclusion,
the Bourbon monarchs contributed to the superficial glory and beauty
of Paris but neglected to successfully address the issues which
would have affected the lives of its citizens. Versailles,
the places, and the boulevards and other avenues did
help to make the city more outwardly attractive and attested to
the divinity and absolute power of the kings, but not one helped
to modernize Paris and improve its living conditions. The streets
were unnavigable, rank, and full of disease, there was no sewage
system to speak of, and sanitary conditions were generally abominable.
The Bourbon kings’ disinterest in these practical issues illustrated
perfectly the extent to which they were separated from the interests
of their citizens and from the dire need for potentially life-saving
reforms. Their power was so absolute that they felt no need to
represent the true needs of their constituents. This unjust rule
could not last forever without check; thus the physical state of
Paris under the Bourbon kings may have in part spurred the Parisians
to revolt in 1789. The citizens were not blind to the injustice
surrounding them, it was inbred with every moment of their existence
and could be seen and smelled in the streets they walked on. Overall
the city had maintained its medieval nature and any map could still
be read as an illustration of drastic class divisions. Much work
had yet to be done before Paris could begin to meet the needs of
its citizens as a healthy and practical place to reside.
Bibliography:
1) Allen, Dinerman, & Hu, Paris
Sanitation before the 20th
Century. (1999)
2) Krupa, Frederique. Paris: Urban
Sanitation Before the 20th
Century. (1991)
3)
Morris, A.E.G. History of Urban Form. (1979)
4)
Olsen,Donald J. The City as a Work of Art. (1986)
5)
World Book Encyclopedia, Paris. (1988)
[1]
Krupa, Frederique. Paris: Urban Sanitation Before the 20th Century
(1991)
[5] Morris, History of Urban Form., p.165
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