[identity profile] victoriavandal.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] revolution_fr
Hi, I was wondering if anyone knows what's currently on the site of 398-400 Rue Saint-Honoré, Duplay house as was? I've avoided going for years because of the fur shop - now there seems to be a tea shop/cafe when I google it. Either way, I was under the impression there wasn't much of the original building left (there seems to be a dispute about whether the whole thing was rebuilt when the extra floors were added in the 19thc, and the ground floor wall in the courtyard was taken out and made into a glass-fronted bar in the 1950's), but there's a right-wing website chatroom boasting of disrupting the 28th July commemorations in the courtyard last year (if they want a monarch, they can have ours!).
So, does any of it still exist, has it been modernised inside beyond recognition, does the courtyard survive, is it accessible to the public, and is the door that used to open onto the alternative staircase (and that had a preservation order put on it in the 1950's) still there?

Date: 2008-07-29 05:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] livviebway.livejournal.com
I will be heading to Paris in September, so I will be able to confirm then, but here is what I know about the Duplay house.

The house was rebuilt in the 19th century because the original building wasn't strong enough to carry the weight of the extra floors. However, the reconstructed building followed the original floor plan.

The courtyard is still there, you enter it from a little alley off the Rue St Honoré and anyone can go into the courtyard. There had been a restaurant called Le Robespierre there for many years, though it is now closed, in what used to be the Duplay's living room. I don't know what is there now. As of the 1950s the separate door was still there, though it opened onto a storage closet. If it's got a preservation order then hopefully it's still there.

Date: 2008-07-29 06:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] livviebway.livejournal.com
From John Haycraft's "In Search of the French Revolution":

"[The Committee of Public Safety] met on the ground floor of the Tuileries, just next to the Pavillon de Flore, which survived the fire of 1871, but has been reconstructed since."

The impression I get is that the rooms did not survive, just the pavilion they were next to, and that has since been reconstructed.

Date: 2008-07-29 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] livviebway.livejournal.com
Though on that note, Wikipedia says they met in the Pavillon de Flore. ;-)

Date: 2008-09-16 04:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marieclaire08.livejournal.com
I've been told by Robespierrist friends in Paris that the Committee of Public Safety's rooms were in the wing of the Tuilleries Palace that burned in 1871. There is an incredibly insignificant plate on one wall of the Rue de Rivoli's collonade just across the street from the Tuilleries that marks the general area.

Date: 2008-07-30 12:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] livviebway.livejournal.com
My, what charming commentary in that article. Oi.

Date: 2008-07-30 02:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trf-chan.livejournal.com
No kidding. I've only read two paragraphs so far and I already want to reach through the screen and slap the greasy, smug twatface who wrote it!

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