Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Soviet-Era Statues, Letter From Great War, Resurface In France

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Soviet-Era Statues, Letter From Great War, Resurface In France

    SOVIET-ERA STATUES, LETTER FROM GREAT WAR, RESURFACE IN FRANCE

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 6, 2008 Wednesday 5:03 PM GMT
    Paris

    French archaeologists said Wednesday they had discovered a cache of
    shattered Soviet-era statues in a chateau north of Paris, as well as
    a letter sent to an American World War I soldier in 1918.

    Broken heads and limbs from the giant statues -- which measured 2.5
    to 3 metres -- were discovered piled inside several 17th-century
    ice chests in the chateau in Baillet-en-France in 2004, the INRAP
    archaeology institute said.

    They also found a series of sculpted stone disks, originally from
    far-flung parts of the Soviet empire including Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Researchers identified the works as part of the Soviet pavillion
    at the 1937 arts and techniques exhibition in Paris, a vast display
    depicting allegories of the 11 Soviet republics -- pitched opposite
    the pavillion from Nazi Germany.

    They were later given as gifts to France's biggest union, the General
    Labour Confederation (CGT), which put them on display in the grounds
    of the chateau.

    But at the start of World War II, the property was confiscated by
    the pro-Nazi French government and the statues were set aside and
    forgotten.

    Also in 2004, in the eastern town of Messein, archaeologists unearthed
    a glass beer bottle with a porcelain cap -- containing a rolled-up
    four-page letter that was posted to a US soldier at the end of the
    Great War.

    Posted from Oklahoma City on July 15, 1918, it was written to sergeant
    Morres Vickers Liepman by an aunt, and describes wartime hardships,
    labour shortages and the mass conscription of black Americans.

    Liepman returned to the United States in August 1919 and was
    demobilised in September of that year. His letter has been added to
    the French National Archives.
Working...
X