The Place Royale and Urban Design in the Ancien Régime

The Place Royale and Urban Design in the Ancien Régime is the first study to examine a unique urban phenomenon that is closely associated with French monarchy in the age of absolutism. A distinct type of city square, the places royales were planned in honour of Louis XIV and his heir, Louis XV. Featuring a free-standing statue of the monarch at its centre, the Place Royale was framed by buildings of uniform, monumental design such as are found in some of the most outstanding examples to have survived, including the Place Vendôme and the Place Stanislas. In this study, Richard Cleary examines the Places Royales in terms of the political mechanisms and design processes through which they were conceived, their intended meanings for contemporaries, and their relationship to the urban fabrics of which they are a part. Also included is a catalogue describing projects for Places Royales in twenty-five cities in France and Canada.

• First book to deal with this influential element in European urban design • Projects are extensively documented with archival drawings and contemporary engravings

Contents

Introduction; 1. Patrons and politics; 2. Design management and funding; 3. The sculpture; 4. The architectural setting; 5. The Place Royale and the city; 6. Visions of the new Rome.

Review

‘This could act as an unusual guide to twenty-three French cities (several have more than one place) - a bonus above the book’s value as architectural history.’ Times Literary Supplement