Lille War Memorial
Lille's imposing war memorial, the focal point of every important remembrance event held in the city, backs on to the medieval chapel built by the Dukes of Burgundy on place Rihour. The memorial was erected on the site of the old City Hall which burned to the ground in 1916. The latter was built at the beginning of the 19th century but was soon considered to be impractical, outdated and taking up too much space in the square.
After the war Mayor Gustave Delory decided to rebuild the City Hall in another location, on the road to Paris, so the city centre could open out on to the working-class district of Saint-Sauveur. Subsequently, the City Council voted to erect a war memorial in the free space on place Rihour. In 1924 an architect named Alleman and a sculptor named Boutry were chosen to design a monument, which they baptized Melancolia, that would evoke the major events of Lille's occupation between 1914 and 1918. However, at the same time, a remembrance trail was being developed in the city to take in all the key sites and monuments dedicated to the members of the Lille Resistance such as Eugène Jacquet, Léon Trulin and Louis de Bettignies and the victims of a huge explosion caused by a munitions depot.
The Lille Memorial to those 'who died for peace'.
This meant that the design of the memorial in place Rihour had to be changed and the typical statuary of early 20th century memorials was replaced by allegories. One of these evokes the sad fate of those taken prisoner by the Germans to ensure the collaboration of the city folk: in July 1915 thirty hostages were held in the Citadel and 131 others were deported to Germany so that the people of Lille would obey and work for the occupying army. In November 1916 three hundred civilians (including Mayor Delory) were sent to a camp and used as bargaining chips to force the French government to release their own German hostages.
Despite pressure for a more 'patriotic' inscription, the City Council decided to dedicate the memorial 'To the people of Lille, soldiers and civilians, [...] who died for Peace'.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Place Rihour - 59000 LILLE
Contact: OFFICE DE TOURISME DE LILLE
Call: 08 91 56 20 04 - +33 (0)3 59 57 94 00
Website: www.lilletourism.com

























































































































































Print
Share
Bookmark





