Historic Paris Mansion Damaged by Fire

News July 18, 2013

SHARE:
(Public Domain)

PARIS, FRANCE—A fire at the seventeenth-century Hotel Lambert on the Île Saint-Louis has destroyed a large part of the building’s roof and a portion of the central staircase, in addition to severely damaging ceiling paintings by Charles Le Brun in the Gallery of Hercules. The historic mansion, once home to Voltaire, was purchased in 2007 by a Qatari prince and was being renovated. “It really is a catastrophe because we fought for the frescos of the Gallery of Hercules to be preserved in the renovation project and now everything has gone up in smoke or been drowned,” commented a neighbor.

  • Features May/June 2013

    Haunt of the Resurrection Men

    A forgotten graveyard, the dawn of modern medicine, and the hard life in 19th-century London

    Read Article
    (Private Collection/The Bridgeman Art Library)
  • Features May/June 2013

    The Kings of Kent

    The surprising discovery of an Anglo-Saxon feasting hall in the village of Lyminge is offering a new view of the lives of these pagan kings

    Read Article
    (Photo by William Laing, © University of Reading)
  • Letter from Turkey May/June 2013

    Anzac's Next Chapter

    Archaeologists conduct the first-ever survey of the legendary WWI battlefield at Gallipoli

    Read Article
    (Samir S. Patel)
  • Artifacts May/June 2013

    Ancient Near Eastern Figurines

    Ceramic figurines were part of a cache of objects found at an Iron Age temple uncovered at the site of Tel Motza outside Jerusalem

    Read Article
    (Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority)