Dublin Core
Titre
New Parisian atmospheres during the First Empire: crafts and industry
Sujet
[SHS:ARCHI] Humanities and Social Sciences/Architecture, space management
[SHS:SOCIO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology
Paris
Napoleon
smell
fermentation
putrefaction
mercury
lead
Description
The Napoleonic Empire turned Paris around from an administrative to an industrial city. A new atmosphere created by sulfuric oxide smells took possession of the Right Bank with sulfuric acid and coal, while mercury fumes and chloride, used respectively for gilding copper and felting hats, poisoned the neighbourhoods downstream and upstream as Paris became the first European producer of luxury items. Before 1789, smells came from fermenting materials and the putrefaction of nightsoil. After 1800, Montfaucon became the world's leading craft district and its stench crossed the Seine and spread as far as the Sorbonne. Along the Bievre River, tanneries and fine leather crafts were so polluted that neither flies nor mosquitoes could ever survive, workers never caught malaria but a lot of lung ailments.
Créateur
Guillerme, André
Source
Ambiances in action. Proceedings of the 2nd International Congress on Ambiances / Ambiances en acte(s). Actes du 2nd Congrès International sur les Ambiances
Ambiances in action / Ambiances en acte(s) - International Congress on Ambiances, Montreal 2012
Date
2012
Langue
ENG
Type
conference proceeding
Identifiant
http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00745955
http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/74/59/55/PDF/ambiances2012_guillerme.pdf
Couverture
Montreal
Canada