The Musée des Souverains (French pronunciation:[myzedesuvʁɛ̃], Museum of Sovereigns) was a history-themed museum of objects associated with former French monarchs. It was created by the future Napoleon III as a separate section within the Louvre Palace, with the aim to glorify all previous sovereign rulers of France and to buttress his own legitimacy. The museum was formed from collections previously held in the National Library, the National Furniture Depository, the Artillery Museum, and the Louvre Museum itself, as well as gifts. After the fall of the Second Empire, the museum was closed and its collections mostly returned to their previous owners.
Henry Barbet de Jouy replaced Viel-Castel as curator in 1863 and re-organized the exhibits in chronological order. The museum came to an end following the fall of the Second Empire on 4 September 1871, and was closed by decree on 8 May 1872.[3]
Location and collections
The museum was located in five rooms of the Colonnade wing of the Louvre,[1] on the first floor at the top of the wing's south staircase (escalier du midi), created under Napoleon by Pierre Fontaine to serve a projected suite of apartments and throne room that was never completed. The first three rooms had been decorated from 1828, under Charles X and the July Monarchy, with wood panelling and ceilings retrieved from historical buildings.[4]: xiv The next two rooms were specifically designed for the museum in 1852 by Félix Duban[4]: xxvii and decorated with paintings by Alexandre-Dominique Denuelle.[5]
Chambre à alcôve, with decoration from Louis XIV's bedchamber in the Louvre Palace's Pavillon du Roi (on the location of the later salle des Sept-Cheminées);
Chambre de parade, with decoration from Henry II's ceremonial chamber, also originally in the Pavillon du Roi;[6]
Salle de la monarchie or salle des Bourbons, with decoration glorifying the House of France;
Salon de l'Empereur, at the midpoint of the Colonnade, with decoration glorifying Napoleon.
The first three rooms have been preserved to this day in a similar state, whereas the decoration of the latter two was dismantled after 1870. All these rooms are now all part of the Department of Egyptian Antiquities of the Louvre.
^Galignani's New Paris Guide, for 1870: Revised and Verified by Personal Inspection, and Arranged on an Entirely New Plan. Paris: A. and W. Galignani and Co. 1870. pp. 168–170.