Robespierre Monument The Robespierre Monument being unveiled on 3 November 1918, three days prior to its destruction
55°45′13″N 37°36′54″E / 55.7537°N 37.6149°E / 55.7537; 37.6149 Location Moscow Designer Beatrice Yuryevna Sandomierz Type Monument Material Concrete Opening date 3 November 1918 Dedicated to Maximilien de Robespierre Dismantled date 7 November 1918
The Robespierre Monument (Russian : Памятник Робеспьеру , romanized : Pamyatnik Robyesp'yeru ) was one of the first monuments erected in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (later part of the Soviet Union ), raised in Moscow on 3 November 1918 – just ahead of the first anniversary of the October Revolution , which had brought the Bolsheviks to power.[ 1] It depicted Maximilien de Robespierre , a prominent figure of the French Revolution . Located in Alexander Garden , it had been designed by the sculptor Beatrice Yuryevna Sandomierz (Russian : Беатриса Юрьевна Сандомирская , romanized : Beatrica Yur'yevna Sandomirskaya ). Created as part of the "monumental propaganda " plan,[ 1] the monument was commissioned by Vladimir Lenin , who in an edict referred to Robespierre as a "Bolshevik avant la lettre ".[ 2] It was only one of several planned statues depicting French revolutionaries – others were to be made of Georges Danton , François-Noël Babeuf and Jean-Paul Marat , although only the one of Danton was never completed.[ 3]
Created in the context of the ongoing Russian Civil War and with the country in a state of war communism , there were few materials available to make the statue.[ 4] Lacking bronze or marble, the monument was instead constructed using concrete, with hollow pipes running through it.[ 5] This design proved frail, lasting only a few days. On the morning of 7 November only a pile of rubble remained.[ 5] Over the following days different newspapers supplied varying versions as to why it collapsed, with Znamya Trudovoi Kommuny and others saying it was the work of "criminal" (counter-revolutionary ) hands, and Izvestia stating the statue's demise was caused by improper construction.[ 5] [ 3]
See also
References
^ a b Von Geldern, James (1993). Bolshevik Festivals, 1917-1920 . Oakland : University of California Press . p. 83. ISBN 052-007-690-7 .
^ Jordan, David P. (2013). Revolutionary Career of Maximilien Robespierre . New York City : Simon & Schuster . ISBN 147-672-571-3 .
^ a b Schoenfeld, Gabriel (1995). "25. Uses of the Past: Bolshevism and the French Revolutionary Tradition". In Schwab, Gail M.; Jeanneney, John R. (eds.). The French Revolution of 1789 and Its Impact . Westport, Connecticut : Greenwood Publishing Group . p. 286. ISBN 031-329-339-2 .
^ Dunn, Susan (2000). Sister Revolutions: French Lightning, American Light . London : Macmillan Publishers . p. 169. ISBN 142-992-369-5 .
^ a b c Bean, Jennifer M.; Horak, Laura; Kapse, Anupama, eds. (2014). Silent Cinema and the Politics of Space . Bloomington : Indiana University Press . p. 89. ISBN 025-301-507-3 .