2007
DOI: 10.4000/books.editionscnrs.9011
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La France préhistorienne de 1789 à 1941

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Cited by 42 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Legislative and administrative measures soon began that underlined the national interest in historic buildings or ‘monuments’ (for overviews, see for instance Hurel ; Poulot ). A decree in Year II forbade damaging ‘libraries and monuments belonging to the nation’ and in 1809, the Code Pénal (Article 237) included criminal penalties for those who ‘damaged monuments whose purpose was public use or decoration’.…”
Section: France: Regime Changes War and Historic Buildingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Legislative and administrative measures soon began that underlined the national interest in historic buildings or ‘monuments’ (for overviews, see for instance Hurel ; Poulot ). A decree in Year II forbade damaging ‘libraries and monuments belonging to the nation’ and in 1809, the Code Pénal (Article 237) included criminal penalties for those who ‘damaged monuments whose purpose was public use or decoration’.…”
Section: France: Regime Changes War and Historic Buildingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, for instance, almost immediately after the 1830 Revolution, the new Interior Minister, Guizot, produced an important report to King Louis Philippe, arguing for the need to conserve ‘our national antiquities’ to protect ‘national civilisation’ (Auduc : 27–40; Bercé : 11–24; Choay ; for a legal historical analysis, Wagener ). It led to the establishment in 1830 of the Inspecteur général des Monuments Historiques within the Interior Ministry, who travelled the country to assess and preserve historic monuments (Auduc : 37–38; Dussaule ; Hurel : 33–4; Mélonio : 152–3). The Paris government sent Circulars in the 1830s to the Prefects stating that no historic monument should be demolished or have work done to it without the agreement of the Inspecteur général.…”
Section: France: Regime Changes War and Historic Buildingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, the creation of the Institut de paléontologie humaine in 1910 was marked by intense disputes between materialists and ecclesiastics. The fact that two of the first three chairs of this prestigious institution were offered to clerics (Breuil and Obermaier) provoked a reaction from those who supported a strict separation between science and religion (Hurel 2007). The dispute between anticlericalists and ecclesiastics also emerged in the interpretation of prehistoric remains.…”
Section: Defining the Boundaries Between 'Archaeology' And 'Society'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…L'univers numérique rend à la diplomatique classique toute son actualité et la place au coeur des responsabilités du praticien intervenant comme tiers de confiance37 . , gardien et communicateur : mélanges en hommage àJacques Grimard, 1947-2007, Québec, Presses de l'université du Québec, 2009, p. 247-269. Françoise, « Des voix et des visages pour mémoire : la création de documents audiovisuels par les Archives de l'Université catholique de Louvain », dans Schoukens Cathy (dir.…”
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