1870 Concanen Bird's-Eye View of Paris During the Franco-Prussian War

ParisAndEnvirons-concanen-1870-4
$3,000.00
No. 8. Stannard and Son's, Perspective View of Paris and its Environs, Shewing All the Fortifications and Redoubts, Together with the Lines of Defense Recently Thrown Up, and the Roads, Rivers, and Railways Communication with the Interior. - Main View
Processing...

1870 Concanen Bird's-Eye View of Paris During the Franco-Prussian War

ParisAndEnvirons-concanen-1870-4

18 Days before the Siege of Paris.
$3,000.00

Title


No. 8. Stannard and Son's, Perspective View of Paris and its Environs, Shewing All the Fortifications and Redoubts, Together with the Lines of Defense Recently Thrown Up, and the Roads, Rivers, and Railways Communication with the Interior.
  1870 (dated)     20 x 29.5 in (50.8 x 74.93 cm)

Description


This 1870 Alfred Concanen view of Paris and its environs details the city's elaborate defensive works just 18 days before the Franco-Prussian War Siege of Paris (September 17, 1870). In this engagement, the enormous city walls, constructed at extraordinary expense and believed to be impregnable, proved little more than a king's folly.
Paris's Fortifications and the Franco-Prussian War
Paris's fortifications began with its walls, built between 1841 and 1844, in an effort by the July Monarchy to avoid a repeat of the defeat France suffered in 1815. The July Monarchy believed the fortifications would prevent Paris from succumbing to a siege. The walls, believed to be impregnable, included over 90 bastions, 17 gates, and 8 train passages. Nonetheless, during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, the French suffered a series of defeats culminating in the Siege of Paris, which lasted from September 17, 1870, until January 28, 1871. Over 180,000 Prussian and German soldiers laid siege to the city, and even though a reported 500,000 French soldiers defended Paris, they could not break the siege. Initially, Prussian commanders had no intention of attacking the city, but as the siege wore on, it became evident that such measures were necessary. In the end, over 12,000 shells were fired on Paris while the besieged city suffered outbreaks of tuberculosis and other diseases. Paris surrendered on January 27, and the Germans held a victory parade in Paris on March 1, 1871.
Publication History and Census
This view was drawn by Alfred Concanen and published by Stannard and Son on September 1, 1870, just over two weeks before the Siege of Paris. Three examples are cataloged in OCLC: the Library of Congress, the University of Basel Library, and the British Library. We are also aware of three examples in private hands.

CartographerS


Alfred Concanen (May 1835 - December 10, 1886) was a British publisher and lithographer active in London, England, in the second half of the 19th century. Concanen was of Northern Irish stock from the Galway region, but was born in Nottingham, England. His father Edward John Concanen (1804 - 1868) was a noted 'engineering artist' and portraitist. It is unclear where Concanen learnt lithography, but it is likely that he was trained by his father. As early as 16, Concanen is recorded as working as an attorney's clerk. Concanen worked for several years with the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News. In the 1850s he partnered with Thomas Wales Lee (1833 - 1910) and Henry Herepath Siebe (1832 - 1887) publishing under the imprints of 'Concanen, Lee and Siebe' and 'Concanen, Siebe and Co.' Lee left the firm in February 1865 and Concanen himself in December 1866. He also began publishing on his own, issuing sheet music covers, in 1860. While Concanen is most famous for his sheet music and theater broadsides, he did dabble in chromolithograph 'seat of war' views in partnership with Stannard and Son from about 1870. Described as 'slight of build with a fair full moustache, something of a dandy, good natured, generous, a play copy of the lions comiques whom he immortalized in his lithographs.' His studio was located at 12, Frith Street, Soho, London. Concanen died suddenly in 1886 after a post-theater visit to a pub on the strand. More by this mapmaker...


William Thomas Stannard (December 15, 1815 - November 23, 1895) was a lithographic printer active in London during the second half of the 19th century. Stannard was born in London, the son of a postal worker. Stannard published initially in partnership with 'Rae' as 'Stannard and Rae' and alone as 'Stannard and Co.' In 1847, he entered into partnership with Francis Dixon as 'Stannard and Dixon', an imprint that remained active until June of 1868, when the partnership dissolved. At this time, Stannard's son, William Stannard (1848 - 1895), joined the firm, which was reestablished as 'Stannard and Son.' This father-son partnership remained active until November of 1891. From 1870, he employed the artist and lithographer Alfred Cancanen to issue numerous striking panoramic 'seat of war' views. In his personal life Stannard was a known philanderer who kept two households, one with his wife Catherine Jane Bowskill (1821 - 1887) and another with his mistress Selah Sands (1831 - 1905). Shortly after Stannard's death, the firm was liquidated at auction. Learn More...

Condition


Very good. Light wear along original fold lines. Verso repairs to fold separations. Closed margin tears professionally repaired on verso. Light soiling.

References


OCLC 23216963.