The Discovery of France (79 page)

BOOK: The Discovery of France
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21. Carcassonne, c. 1859, at the start of Viollet-le-Duc’s restoration. ‘The process of converting the place from an irresponsible old town into a conscious “specimen” has of course been attended with eliminations; the population has, as a general thing, been restored away’ (Henry James, 1884). There were complaints that Viollet-le-Duc’s steep, blue-slate roofs turned the southern citadel into a northern château. The red, Roman tiles and gentler slopes of the local roofs are more typical of the south. The ‘chemin creux’ (hollow way) is a road fashioned by nature, historical accident and centuries of use. Similar road-ravines were found in Picardy and the west of France. 20. Saint-Pierre de Montmartre, the oldest church in Paris, as part of the world’s first telecommunications system. Saint-Pierre was built in 1133 on the site of a temple to Mars. It escaped demolition in the Revolution as a ‘Temple of Reason’ and as a plinth for the telegraph tower. It was the first relay station on the first line (1794), which ran from the roof of the Louvre to Saint Catherine’s church in Lille.

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