I did not mention, when I wrote about Musée de
l’Armée, that I made a quick pass through the museum shop. I thought it
interesting that you can buy felt Christmas ornaments pertaining to les
Invalides (the complex of buildings of which the museum is a part).
The Dôme des Invalides houses the tomb of
Napoléon I. In all my visits to the museum I have never bothered with this.
Tombs—meh. However, he is rather a big deal, so his tomb is suitably
pretentious.
Here are ornaments shaped like Napoléon’s hat
and les Invalides:
And here’s the building IRL:
Bonaparte shares space with his son, Napoléon
François Charles Joseph (by Marie Louise of Austria). Styled the King of Rome,
the boy never ruled (except for 15 days in 1815, when he was four years old),
and died in Austria, age 21. Known as l’Aiglon (the Eaglet), his remains were
returned to France by Hitler in 1940 (except for his heart and intestines,
which stayed in Vienna, traditional resting place of Habsburgs). By that time, the
French would have preferred the return of coal mines and factories.
Anyhow, here’s a felt Aiglon:
And finally, I thought a Mme Bonaparte (Joséphine, not Marie Louise, but those empresses were fairly interchangeable)
was a nice touch:
The ornaments were 19 € 95, so I didn’t buy
any.
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