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fjt_589832 - PONTS ET CHAUSSÉES / BRIDGES AND ROADS PONT GARE ET PORT DE GRENELLE 1826

PONTS ET CHAUSSÉES / BRIDGES AND ROADS PONT GARE ET PORT DE GRENELLE MS
280.00 €(Approx. 305.20$ | 235.20£)
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Type : PONT GARE ET PORT DE GRENELLE
Date: 1826
Metal : silver
Diameter : 36 mm
Orientation dies : 12 h.
Weight : 20,15 g.
Edge : lisse
Puncheon : Main 1845-1860
Rarity : R2
Catalogue references :

Obverse


Obverse legend : CHARLES X ROI DE FRANCE.
Obverse description : Buste de Charles X à gauche signé BARRE F.

Reverse


Reverse legend : PONT GARE ET PORT DE GRENELLE. A L'EXERGUE : M. DCCC. XXVI..
Reverse description : La Seine assise à gauche, accoudée sur son urne et tenant dans son bras une corne d'abondance. Face à elle, Mercure debout montrant avec son caducée le port. Derrière lui le pont de Grenelle.

Historical background


PONTS ET CHAUSSÉES / BRIDGES AND ROADS

The French Monarchy had long cherished the project of ensuring the construction of thoroughfares which usually fell within the competence of local authorities, provinces, lords or communities.. For essentially financial reasons, the project only really came to fruition in 1716 with the creation of a hierarchical corps, on the model of the corps of military engineers, responsible for the fortifications, which had been organized some twenty-five years earlier.. Initially, the corps des Ponts et Chaussées comprised an inspector general, an architect first engineer, three inspectors general and twenty-one engineers, who had to design and build roads and engineering structures with sub-engineers recruited by their care. The task entrusted to them corresponds to a significant shift in the priorities of the State. In 1716, Louis XIV had been dead for almost a year, leaving France exhausted from long years of war. Concerns of military grandeur are almost immediately followed by the pursuit of economic power which must be achieved by facilitating trade through more and safer transportation infrastructure.. Offering more ramified service possibilities than rivers and canals, roads will be the subject of repeated investments by the State, allowing bridge engineers to appear as the privileged servants of its economic plans.. Text taken from the excellent: http://www. enpc. fr/teachings/Picon/CorpsPC. html.

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