Paris | The obelisk of the Place de la Concorde regains its tip

(Paris) From the ground, the golden top of the obelisk (called pyramidion) of the Place de la Concorde in Paris seemed so far pointed, it was not so: a point was finally installed on Tuesday, making at most old Parisian monument its original aesthetic.


Offered by Egypt to France in 1830 in recognition of the deciphering of hieroglyphs by Champollion, the obelisk of Luxor, a jewel of international heritage and a symbol of the splendor of Egyptian history, “arrived in Paris without its point eroded in over the centuries,” Isabelle Morin-Loutrel, curator of historical monuments, told AFP.

“The hieroglyphs and bas-reliefs of Egyptian tombs show pointed obelisks. We do not know for how long the obelisk of Luxor no longer had its point, but probably for a very long time, ”underlines Mr.me Morin-Loutrel.


PHOTO IAN LANGSDON, FRANCE-PRESSE AGENCY

As part of a new restoration project launched in 2022, the obelisk is now perfectly pointed with the installation of a steel point covered with gold leaf, carried out by the Ateliers d’art Saint-Jacques and the Coubertin foundry, under the aegis of the Ministry of Culture.

The top of the obelisk, erected on Place de la Concorde in 1836 on the initiative of Louis-Philippe, remained in the state of a stump until 1998.

With the sponsorship of the Bergé-Saint Laurent Foundation, a golden pyramidion was then installed but without its tip, for technical reasons. Left unfinished, the top of the pyramidion crowning the obelisk had been damaged by volatiles.

As part of a new restoration project launched in 2022, the obelisk is now perfectly pointed with the installation of a steel point covered with gold leaf, carried out by the Ateliers d’art Saint-Jacques and the Coubertin foundry, under the aegis of the Ministry of Culture.

Property of the French State, the obelisk of the place de la Concorde, carved in a pink rock close to granites, is part of a pair erected in front of the temple of Amun of Luxor 3300 years ago, during the reign of Ramses II. It is 23 meters high and weighs 220 tons, not including its 240-ton pedestal.


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