Authors: Jacques Yonnet
*
 Â
âthe days of wanton youth'
Villon's â
Testament
' verse XXVI:
Hé! Dieuâ se j'eusse étudié&/Ou temps de ma jeunesse folleâ&/Et à bonnes moeurs dédiéâ&/J'eusse maison et couche molle
. Oh God! If only I'd studied&/In the days of my wanton youth&/And cultivated good behaviourâ&/I'd have a house and a soft bed.
*
 Â
Auteuil
The southern part of the wealthy 16th arrondissement in south- west Paris.
*
 Â
prohibited zone
Under German occupationâ France was divided into Vichy France in the south and Occupied France in the north. Furthermoreâ
Alsace-Lorraine was incorporated into the Reichâ while the very north and the Pas de Calais were put under the administration of Occupied Belgium. In the north-eastâ from Picardie to Lorraineâ there was a so-called prohibited zoneâ where the population that had fled during the exodus was not allowed to returnâ and land belonging to these exiles was appropriated for cultivation by German farmers.
*
 Â
Argonne trenches
To the west of Verdunâ where some of the fiercest fighting of WWI took place.
*
 Â
Fort St-Jean
At the mouth of the harbour in Marseilles.
*
 Â
Sidi-bel-Abbès
From 1832â1962 headquarters of the French Foreign Legionâ founded in 1831 by King Louis-Philippe for the conquest of Algeria.
*
 Â
Monastir
The name by which present-day Bitolaâ in southern Macedoniaâ was known under Turkish rule.
*
 Â
Hendaye
On the border between France and Spainâ at the mouth of the Bidassoa estuary on the Atlantic coast.
*
 Â
Kharkov
Also in the Ukraineâ west of Kiev.
*
 Â
Marquis de Ste-Croix
and
Brinvilliers
Notorious murderers of the 17th centuryâ Marie-Madeleine d'Aubrayâ wife of the Marquis de Brinvilliersâ and her lover Gaudin de Ste-Croixâ conspired to murder her father and her two brothersâ who were scandalized by their liaison and tried to oppose it. Ste- Croix died in his laboratoryâ overcome by the fumes of a poison he was developingâ which prompted an investigation that led to Brinvilliers being brought to trial and sentenced to death. Mme de Sevigné (1626â96)â whose famous
Letters
were published in the 18th centuryâ saw her taken to be executedâ in 1676â and Alexandre
Dumas (1802â1870)â author of
The Three Musketeers
and
The Count of Monte Cristo
â recorded the affair in his
Celebrated Crimes
â published in four volumesâ 1839â41.
*
 Â
St-Denis plain
To the north of Parisâ beyond Porte de la Chapelleâ where the basilica of St Denis is located.
*
 Â
Lariboisière
Hospital on Rue Ambroise-Paré near the Gare du Nord in the 10th arrondissementâ completed in 1854 to a pavilion plan that won the approval of Florence Nightingaleâ who came to see it when it was newly opened.
*
 Â
Tell me who you haunt â¦
Nadja
â an âanti-literary' prose work published in 1928 by poet and author of the
Surrealist Manifesto
André Breton (1896â1966)â opens with following words:
Qui suis-je? Si par exception je m'en rapportais à un adage: pourquoi tout ne reviendrait-il pas à savoir qui je âhante'?
[Who am I? Suppose I were to make an exception and fall back on an old adage: why shouldn't all be explained by knowing whom I âhaunt'?]
*
 Â
Jehan de Chelles
One of the masons of Notre-Dameâ who has left his name on the south portal of the cathedralâ together with the dateâ 12 February 1257â on which building work began.
*
 Â
Gentilly
On the southern outskirts of Paris.
*
 Â
Salle Adyar
Assembly room at 4 Square Rapp in the 7th arrondissement.
*
 Â
Les Halles
The central market in Paris originated in the early 12th century when Louis VI established a market on land belonging to the priory of St Denis-le-Chartre (on a site where even in Roman times there had been a market). It expanded under subsequent monarchsâ with new halls added for the various goods sold. When the market was
moved out of cenral Paris in the 1970sâ the twelve enormous glass- and-iron pavilions of which it consisted by thenâ ten of which erected under Napoleon IIIâ the others dating from 1937â were demolished and replaced by the shopping centre known as the Forum des Halles. A classic 19th-century description of Les Halles is to be found in Zola's
Le Ventre de Paris
â 1873.
*
 Â
Brétigny
The aerodrome at Brétigny-sur-Orgeâ some thirty kilometres to the south of Paris. (Also the site of the Treaty of Brétigny signed in 1360â during the Hundred Years Warâ under the terms of which King Jean II of France was exchanged for an enormous ransom.)
*
 Â
Marolles-en-Hurepoix
A village a few kilometres south of the aerodrome.
*
 Â
Quatre-Sergents
In September 1822â during a period of great political instability in France and Europeâ four young army officersâ Goubinâ Pommierâ Raoulx and Boriesâ who were members of a Republican secret societyâ were executed on the Place de Grève for conspiring to subvert their regimentâ which deployed from Paris to La Rochelleâ and for taking part in an abortive insurrection led by General Berton at Saumur. Because of their youthâ courage and defianceâ they came to be regarded as martyrs for the liberal cause.
*
 Â
Belle-Ile
Island off the south coast of Britanny with two notoriously grim detention centres for young offendersâ one housed in what was originally a military prisonâ which were closed in 1979. Offenders would sometimes graduate directly from Belle-Ile to the
Bat' d'Af'
.
*
 Â
Casque d'Or
The nickame of a golden-haired beauty for whose favours two rival gang leaders confronted each other on the streets of Paris in 1902â a story that inspired Jacques Becker's film of 1952â in which Simone Signoret starred as Casque d'Or (âGoldilocks'â or âGolden Marie' as the film was titled in English)â Serge Reggiani her lover
Manda
and Claude Dauphin as the apache gangster
Leca
.
*
 Â
Val d'Amour
The name by which Rue Glatigny (which no longer exists) on Ile de la Cité was also known. (At the beginning of the 19th century there were over 50 streets and some 20 churches or chapels on the Ile de la Cité; by the 1870s urban replanning had opened up this insalubrious warren and reduced the number of streets to no more than a dozen.)
Until the mid-12th century attempts were made to banish prostitutes from the city altogetherâ but it became clear this was never going to be achieved. In legislation attempting to control prostitutionâ Rue Glatigny and several other streets â including Tironâ Chaponâ Brisemiche â were designated areas where prostitutes were allowed to ply their trade in houses dedicated to that purpose â and which were taxed â although regulations were hard to enforce and much flouted.
*
 Â
Aliscans of Paris
The Aliscansâ or Alyscamps (Elysian Fields) in Arlesâ in the South of Franceâ is a large necropolis founded by the Gallo-Romansâ renowned as a site of great spirituality. It was also the site of a crushing defeat of the Christians by the Saracensâ recounted in a 12th-century
chanson de geste
. There are paintings of the Alyscamps by Gaugin and Van Gogh.
*
 Â
Uncle Guillaume
Villonâ
Le Testament
â LXXXVII: â
mon plus que pèreâ&/Maître Guillaume de Villonâ&/Qui m'a été plus doux que mère&/A enfant levé de maillon
' ⦠[more than a father to meâ&/Maitre Guillaume de Villonâ&/ who's been kinder to me than any mother&/towards a child raised from infancy].
*
 Â
Pomme-de-Pin
A tavern mentioned in Villon's
Lais
â XIXâ and
Testament
â CI. Also mentioned by Rabelais. According to one 19th-century historianâ located in Rue de la Juiverie (now part of Rue de la Cité) on the Ile de la Cité.
*
 Â
The Ballad of the Gallows-Birds
Sometimes called Villon's âEpitaph'. See ch.12â pp.207 and 208.
*
 Â
Melun
The prison in the prefectural town of the departement of Seine-et- Marneâ located some forty-five kilometres to the south-east of Parisâ
occupies the entire tip of the ancient island centre of the City. There is a pun hereâ linking the prisonâ called the Maison Centraleâ with the Ãcole Centraleâ the State School of Engineering.
*
 Â
Arbre-à -Liège
10 Rue Tiquetonneâ running between Rue Montmartre et Boulevard St Denis.
*
 Â
Alexandre Arnoux
Poetâ novelistâ playwright (1884â1973).
*
 Â
St-Germain-l'Auxerrois
Formerly the royal chapelâ opposite the Louvre.
*
 Â
exodus
The German invasion of the Low Countries in May 1940â followed by the collapse of the Somme-Aisne frontâ and the withdrawal of the French government from Paris on June 10â led to a mass exodus of some three-quarters of the population of the Cityâ around two million peopleâ over a period of three days. A census carried out three weeks later indicated that around 300â000 had returned.
*
 Â
Gobelins Factory
The famous Gobelins tapestry factory established in Paris at the beginning of the 17th century by a family of that nameâ which for a brief period under Louis XIV produced other types of furnishings for royal residences. The factory premises at one time included houses and gardens for the weavers and their families.
*
 Â
Bagneux
Cemetery at Chatillon-Montrougeâ to the south-east of Paris.
*
 Â
Ferdinand Lop
French humorist and writer (1891â1974)â a prototype Screaming Lord Sutch who repeatedly stood for President with the slogan â
Tout pour le front Lopulaire
' (a personalized Front Populaire). The author ofâ among other worksâ
Petain and History: What I would have said in my induction speech at the Académie Française had I been elected to it
(1957)â from 1946 to 1958 he stood on an electoral platform promising the
abolition of poverty after ten o'clock at nightâ the extension of the Boulevard St Michel to the seaâ the nationalisation of brothelsâ the award of a pension to the wife of the unknown soldierâ and the removal of Paris to the countryside so that its citizens could enjoy some fresh air.
*
 Â
Au Pilori
Anti-Semitic weekly published under German Occupation with an allocation of paper that allowed a printrun of 90â000 copies.
*
 Â
Raymond Duncan
Artistâ printerâ and designer (1874â1966). Eccentric brother of the dancer Isadora Duncanâ whom he encouraged in 1900 to join him in Parisâ where he had already taken up residence. He accompanied her to Greece in 1903. Finding shoes obnoxiousâ he was making his own sandals and now took to wearing ancient Greek- style robes. An article written by Grace Tibbits in 1917 (which appears on the Virtual Museum of San Francisco website) refers to the stir caused when he and his wife (Penelopeâ sister of the Greek poet Sikelianos) and their young son arrived in winter on a visit to the USâ dressed in this fashion. âThe authorities in New York said that Mr and Mrs Duncan might dress as they pleasedâ but the small Duncan would fall into the hands of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children if he weren't more warmly garbed.'
*
 Â
as Attila was wont to say
Attila the Hun is supposed to have saidâ âWhere my horse passesâ grass no longer grows.'
*
 Â
Roi des Aulnes
Der Erl-König
(The Erl-Kingâ or King of the Alders) is the title of a narrative poem written by Goethe in 1782â based on a folk legend about Death snatching a child. Schubert wrote a song based on this poemâ which was orchestrated by Berlioz in 1860. There is a translation of Goethe's poem by Sir Walter Scott.
*
 Â
Kostis Palamas
Greek poet (1859â1943)â author of
The Twelve Lays of the Gypsy
â a long lyrical philosophical poem from which these quotations are takenâ figuring the Gypsy-musician who is celebrated as the symbol of freedomâ artâ patriotism and civilisation.
*
 Â
Admiral Horthy
Hungarian dictator (1868â1957)â who served as Admiral of the Austro-Hungarian fleet during WWI and as regent from 1920 to 1944. Allied with Germany and Italy at the beginning of the warâ Hungary began negotiating a separate peace with the Allies in 1942â but was occupied by the Germans in 1944 and then invaded by the Russians.
*
 Â
our own concentration camps
St Cyrienâ Argelès-sur-Merâ Bacarèsâ Noeâ Gursâ Vernetâ Les Millesâ Pithiviersâ Rivesaltes ⦠When the Spanish Republicans were defeated in 1939â thousands of refugees fled to Franceâ including many who had fought with the International Brigades. They were herded into camps where conditions were appalling and kept under armed guard. After the fall of Franceâ anti-Fascists of various other nationalities were interned. Many internees died in the campsâ others in transit. Others were handed over to the Germans and deported to Germany. Jews who were rounded up in raids that began in France in 1941 were transferred to transit campsâ such as the one at Drancy (a police barracks before the war)â before being deported to the death camps in Germany.