Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T19:05:50.327Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Funeral Conflicts in Nineteenth-Century France

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Thomas Kselman
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame

Extract

The French celebration of the centenary of Victor Hugo's death in 1985 included new editions of his works, biographies, an exhibit at the Grand Palais in Paris, all that you would expect in honor of his life and art. But Hugo's death and funeral also drew the attention of some scholars, and forgood reason. Beginning on 18 May 1885, when what proved to be his final illness was announced, the newspapers were filled with reports and rumors about Hugo's condition. Following his death on 22 May journalists concentrated on what has been called the funeral of the century. Two million peoplecame to see Hugo's body lying in state at the Arc de Triomphe, and anenormous crowd viewed the procession to the Panthe on where he was buried.

Type
Catholicism and the Frontiers of Conflict
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Ben-Amos, Avner, “Les funerailles de Victor Hugo,” in La République, Vol. I ofLes lieux de mémoire, Nora, Pierre, ed. (Paris: Gallimard, 1984), 473522Google Scholar; André Comte-Sponville, Emmanuel Fraisse, Jacqueline Lalouette, and Regnier, Philippe, Tombeau de Victor Hugo (Paris: Quintette, 1985).Google Scholar

2 Regnier, Philippe, “L'enterrement du siècle,” in Compte-Sponville et at., Tombeau de Victor Hugo, 59–108.Google Scholar

3 See the exchange of letters published by Philippe Regnier in “L'art de mourir,” in Compte-Sponville et al., Tombeau de Victor Hugo, 28–29. 0010–4175/88/2654–2315 $5.00 © 1988 Society for Comparative Study of Society and History

4 For the history of the Pantheon, see Ozouf, Mona, “Le Pantheon,” in Les lieux de memoire, Nora, , ed., 140–66Google Scholar; and Lalouette, Jacqueline, “Le Panthèon, un temple laïque,” in Compte-Sponville et al., Tombeau de Victor Hugo, 4143.Google Scholar

5 Cited in Lalouette, “Le Panthéon,” 48–49.

6 For the controversy over the refusal of the last sacraments to Jansenists, see Godard, Philippe, La querelle des refus des sacrements (1730–1765) (Paris: Donat-Montchrestien, 1937)Google Scholar. Kley, Dale Van, in The Damiens Affair and the Unraveling of the Ancien Régime, 1750–1770 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984), stresses the importance of the controversy in contributing to Damiens's attempt to assassinate Louis XV, and to antiroyalist sentiment in general.Google Scholar

7 In a “Note sur le refus de sacrements,” dated 1 July 1814, and filed in the Archives Nationales (cited hereafter as AN) F195504, there is a list of precedents for government intervention to protect the rights of those who desired the last sacraments, including references to the Jansenist controversy of the eighteenth century.

8 Gaudry, Joachim, Traité de la législation des cultes, 3 vols. (Paris: Durand, 1856), I, 204–10; II, 545–47.Google Scholar

9 Etlin, Richard, The Architecture of Death—The Transformation of the Cemetery in Eighteenth-Century Paris (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1984), 246–48, 299–300.Google Scholar

10 The text of article 19, which was most frequently invoked during the funeral controversies, reads as follows: “Lorsque le ministre d'un culte, sous quelque pretexte que ce soit, se permettra de refuser son ministère pour l'inhumation d'un corps, l'autorité civile, soit d'office, soit sur la requisition de la famille, nommera un autre ministre de meme culte pour remplir ces fonctions; dans tous les cas, l'autorite civile est chargée de faire porter, présenter, déposer et inhumer le corps.” The text of the decree of 23 Prairial, along with other decrees and circulars on the question of the refusal of sacraments, can be found in AN F195512 and F195513. Many of the key texts are conveniently collected and printed in Rapport sur la municipilisation du service des Pompes funebres de la ville de Paris (Paris, 1905)Google Scholar, which can be found in AN F22762. On the importance of the decree of 23 Prairial, see Ligou, Daniel, “L'evolution des cimetieres,” Archives de sciences sociales de religions, 39 (1975), 7377.Google Scholar

11 The issue of the mayor's right to present the body in the church after the clergy had refused a religious service was debated by the law students of Paris in 1830, who voted in support of the municipal authority. Their debate, along with several incidents in which mayors broke into churches, provoked an exchange in the Paris press. See Le moniteur, 21 and 26 February 1830, 2 March 1830; Le constitutionnel, 23 February 1830.

12 See, for example, the circular letters from the minister of interior to the prefects of 8 Messidor, year XII; 26 Thermidor, year XII (AN F195513). In a letter from the prefect of Seineet-Oise to the subprefects and mayors of his department, dated 24 September 1838, he noted “serious difficulties” between mayors and curés over the administration of the decree of 23 Prairial. Similar problems were addressed in a letter from the minister of cults to the bishops of 28 June 1838; a letter from the minister of justice and cults to the bishops of 16 December 1844; and a letter from the minister of justice and cults to the bishops and prefects of 25 June 1847 (AN F195512). In general these administrative letters urged bishops and prefects to encourage a tolerant attitude in the clergy with regard to religious services for the dead. But they also discouraged municipal authorities from directly challenging clerical authority by forcing their way into churches when a refusal had taken place.

13 Singer, Barnet, Village Notables in Nineteenth-Century France (Albany: SUNY Press, 1983), 69.Google Scholar

14 Agulhon, Maurice, La Republique au village (Paris: Seuil, 1970), 183Google Scholar. Berenson, Edward, in Populist Religion and Left-Wing Politics in France (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984), 6667Google Scholar, notes the evidence of Agulhon but distinguishes more clearly between irreligion and anticlericalism. For a position similar to Agulhon's, see Chaline, N. J., “Une image du diocèse de Rouen sous l'épiscopatde Mgr. DeGiray (1832–1844),” Revue d'histoire de l'Eglise de France, no. 160, 57 (1972), 59.Google Scholar

15 The following files include references to funeral conflicts in Maine-et-Loire: AN F195514, F195523, F195530, F195712; Archives Départementales de Maine-et-Loire (cited hereafter as ADML) 5V30, 5V34, 5V35, 5V36, 1M6; Archives d'Evêché d'Angers (cited hereafter as AEA): 6G1, O (parish files).

16 I have not included in my analysis two cases in which Protestants received a civil burial. Because the individuals involved made no claim for a Catholic service, and could make no claim, their situation does not seem comparable to those treated here. Documents on these cases can be found in AN F195530. This is not to deny the importance of burial conflicts between Protestants and Catholics, particularly where there was a substantial Protestant community. See Wahl, Alfred, Confession et comportemem dans les campagnes d'Alsace et deBade, 1871–1939, 2 vols. (Metz: University of Metz, 1980), II, 695717.Google Scholar

17 AEA, E. Parents of children who died before being baptized were not necessarily indifferent about the fate of the souls of these children. In many areas of France special sanctuaries, called a repit, were reputedly capable of bringing infants back to life briefly so that they could be baptized. See Gélis, Jacques, “La mort et le salut spirituel du nouveau-né. Essai d'analyse et d'interpretation du ‘sanctuaire à répit’ (XIVC-XIXC siecle),” Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, 31 (1984), 361–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Rebouillat, Marguerite, “Les sanctuaires de Bourgogne dits ‘à répit,’” in La piétà nos jours, Actes du 99= congrès national de sociétés savantes (Paris: Bibliothèque Nationale, 1976), 173–92.Google Scholar

18 See documents on conflicts in Champigne and Longue in AN F195514.

19 Letter of Mayor Guinebert of Longue to prefect of Maine-et-Loire, 15 April 1863, AN F195514.

20 See file on “Mort-nès” in AN F195514.

21 Journal officiel, Chambre, Annexes, 703 1879, 1776–77.Google Scholar

22 This observation is based on visits made to cemeteries in Maine-et-Loire between 1984 and 1986. Good examples of the segregation of young children are found in St. Michel-et-Chanveaux and Beaufort-en-Vallée.

23 Gennep, Arnold Van, Manuel de folklore franqais contemporain (Paris: Picard, 1943), I, 726–73, provides extensive details on the conduct of the convoi funebre.Google Scholar

24 Letter of mayor of Varennes to subprefect of Saumur, 30 December 1828, ADML 5V30.

25 Lebrun, Francois, Les hommes et la mort en Anjou aux 17e et 18e siécles (Paris: Mouton, 1971), 418.Google Scholar

26 Juin, Abbé, Lettre an clergé français, ou conseils touchant les refus de sépulture (Paris: Leclerc, n.d.), 2528.Google Scholar

27 “Des suicides: Résumé de la législation ancienne et moderne sur l'inhumation des personnes qui se donnent volontairement la mort,” in file on “Suicides,” AN Fl 95514. Michael MacDonald has noted the popular resistance to burying suicides in consecrated ground in nineteenth-century England. See The Secularization of Suicide in England, 1660–1800,” Past and Present, no. 111 (05 1980), 88.Google Scholar

28 AEA, O (Champtoceaux).

29 L'ami de la religion, 101 (1839), 246.Google Scholar

30 Chesnais, Jean-Claude, Les morts violents en France depuis 1826—Comparisons internationales (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1976), 42Google Scholar

31 ADML 1M6/63.

32 La patriote de I'ouest, 20 December 1881, clipping filed in AN F195776.

33 Le monde, 2 06 1971, p. 16.Google Scholar

34 Gaudry, Traité de la législation des cultes, I, 204.

35 AN F195523.

36 AN F195523.

37 Sauvigny, Guillaume de Better de, The Bourbon Restoration (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1966), 382–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

38 For the debate on the Montlosier affair in the French Chamber, see L'ami de la religion, 100 (1839), 1820Google Scholar, 148, 156. For extensive citations from the newspaper coverage of the affair, see Vami de la religion, 99 (1838), 518Google Scholar, 529–30, 536–37, 550–52, 581–82; and 100 (1839), 247. Louis-Marie Cormenin, an important publicist whose pamphlets generally opposed the July Monarchy, defended the bishop of Clermont-Ferrand on the principle of the need to separate spiritual from temporal affairs. See his Défense de l'évêque de Clermont. traduit pour cause d'abus, devant les révérends Pères du Conseil d'Etat, 2d ed. (Paris: Pagnerre, 1839).Google Scholar

39 The decision of the Conseil d'Etat can be found in AN F196115.

40 AN F195523.

41 For material on the civil burial movement that developed in the 1860s and continued into the Third Republic, see Lalouette, Jacqueline, “Les enterrements civils dans les premieres decennies de la Troisieme Republique,” Ethnologie francaise, 13:2 (1983), 111–28Google Scholar; Pérouas, Louis, Refus d'une religion, religion d'un refus en Limousin rural, 1880–1940 (Paris: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, 1985), 5059, 178–86Google Scholar; Cholvy, Gerard, Religion et société au XlXe siècle: Le diocèse de Montpellier, 2 vols. (Lille: Universite de Lille III, 1983), II, 1256–58Google Scholar; Isambert, Francois, Christianisme et classe ouvriere (Paris: Castermann, 1961), 88114Google Scholar; Hutton, Patrick, The Cult of the Revolutionary Tradition: The Blanquists in Politics, 1864–1893 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981), 5355.Google Scholar

42 AEA, O (Broc). Jean Barois, the protagonist in Roger Martin du Gard's novel, drew up a will with a similar goal, which included an elaborate justification for his rejection of the Church's assistance at his deathbed. In Barois' case, however, he did change his mind and receive the last sacraments and a Catholic service; his will was burned by his pious wife and her curè. See Gard, Roger Martin du, Jean Barois (1913; New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1969).Google Scholar

43 AEA, O (Gennes). For similar rituals, see Lalouette, “Les enterrements civils,” 111–14; Pérouas, Refus d'une religion, 180–81. The ceremonials used at civil burials in the Third Republic resemble those of the compagnons earlier in the century; see the descriptions in Agricol Perdiguier, Memoires d'un compagnon (Paris: Maspero, 1977), 193–95, 341–42. The compagnons did, however, insist on a church service as well.Google Scholar

44 AEA, 6G1, file on “enterrements civils.” For similar conflicts, see Pérouas, Refus d'une religion, 178–79.

45 For an overview of the debate on civil burials, see Caperan, Louis, Histoire contemporaine de la Laïcité française (Paris: Nouvelles Editions Latines, 1961), III, 98104Google Scholar. Victor Hugo reacted to the issue with a poem that was highly critical of the clergy, published as part of the “nouvelle serie” of La legende des siecles in 1877. For a recent edition of this poem, see La légende des siècles (Paris: Garnier-Flammarion, 1967), II, 272–73.Google Scholar

46 For a particularly heated exchange in which Freppel and Clovis Hughes, a republican deputy, accused each other's party of tolerating the theft of corpses, see Journal officiel, Chambre Debats (705 1883), 518. When the positivist Paul Bert died while serving as an administrator in Vietnam in 1886, some Catholic papers reported that he had converted on his deathbed, a story that was denied in the liberal papers, which in this case were accurate. See Le temps, 24 December 1886, p. 2; 29 December 1886, pp. 1–2.Google Scholar

47 For the passage of the final version of the law, see Journal officiel, Chambre Débats (29 10 1887), 1898, 1907.Google Scholar

48 In the twentieth arrondissment of Paris, 41 percent of those who died in 1884 were buried with a civil ceremony; for statistics on the importance óf civil burials in working class Paris, see Isambert, Christianisme et classe ouvrière, 105–7. For Lyon, see McManners, John, “Death and the French Historians,” in Mirrors of Mortality: Studies in the Social History of Death, Whaley, Joachim, ed. (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1981), 108. For civil burials in rural Limousin, see Pérouas, Refus d'une religion, 56–57.Google Scholar

49 For an excellent summary of the standard meanings of secularization, see Wilson, Bryan, “Secularization: The Inherited Model,” in The Sacred in a Secular Age, Hammond, Philip E., ed. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985), 920.Google Scholar

50 Vemon Lidtke provides a good example of the inclusive manner in which historians define secularization. “By secularisation I mean a two-fold process whereby religious thinking, practice, and institutions lose social and personal significance and a new vocabulary is acquired which provides a medium for asking and answering questions about the meaning of life.” See his Social Class and Secularisation in Imperial Germany—The Working Classes,” Yearbook of the Leo Baeck Institute, 25 (1980), 2122CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Owen Chadwick's meaning is perhaps more typical of the ways in which historians use the term. After acknowledging its lack of clarity, Chadwick nevertheless insists on its value. “From these difficulties of definition it does not follow that the umbrella word is misused. It is often easier to be sure that a process is happening than to define precisely what the process contains and how it happens.… By the nature of historical science, vagueness, blurred edges, recognition of the unchartable mystery in human motives and attitudes and decisions, are no necessary obstacle to an authentic though broad judgment in history.” Thus a rhetorical flourish solves a conceptual problem. See Chadwick, , The Secularization of the European Mind in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1975), 23.Google Scholar

51 Wade Clark Roof, “The Study of Social Change in Religion,” in The Sacred in a Secular Age, Hammond, ed., 76. For Geertz, see “Religion as a Cultural System,” in his The Interpretation of Cultures (New York: Basic Books, 1973), 87125Google Scholar. Sociologists, even when sensitive to the symbolic significance of religion, will still leave it out of their accounts of secularization. Martin, David, in A General Theory of Secularization (New York: Harper and Row, 1978), 13Google Scholar, although he acknowledges that “religion is a creature of the reaction of symbol, feeling, and meaning,” confines himself primarily to the study of what he calls structure, by which he means the pattern of relations between the modern state and industrial society to institutional churches. Berger, Peter, in The Sacred Canopy—Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion (New York: Doubleday Anchor, 1967), 107–8Google Scholar, distinguishes between the “secularization of society” and the “secularization of consciousness,” and relates the latter to situations of religious pluralism in which belief becomes a matter of private choice. But Berger, like Martin, focuses primarily on the institutional dimension of secularization. For an overview of how the concept has been employed in a variety of disciplines, see Ausmur, Harry, The Polite Escape—On the Myth of Secularization (Athens: Ohio University Press, 1982).Google Scholar

52 For a review of the debate in France on the religious significance of the sustained attachment to the rites de passage, see Isambert, Francois, Le sens du sacre—fete et religion populaire (Paris: Les Editions de Minuit, 1982), 78122Google Scholar; Rousseau, Andre, “Au temps de Vatican II,” in Histoire des catholiques en France, Lebrun, Francois, ed. (Paris: Privat, 1980), 482514Google Scholar; and Pannet, Robert, Le catholicisme populaire (Paris: Centurion, 1974)Google Scholar. Understanding popular religious belief and practice has now come to be seen as important for Latin American studies; see Levine, Daniel H., Religion and Political Conflict in Latin America (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1986)Google Scholar. Historical studies of popular religion include Thomas, Keith, Religion and the Decline of Magic (New York: Scribner's, 1971)Google Scholar; Ginzburg, Carlo, The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller (New York: Penguin, 1980)Google Scholar; idem, The Night Battles: Witchcraft and Agrarian Cults in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (New York: Penguin, 1984)Google Scholar; Christian, William, Jr., Apparitions in Late Medieval and Renaissance Spain (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981)Google Scholar; idem, Local Religion in Sixteenth-Century Spain (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981)Google Scholar; Obelkevich, James. ed., Religion and the People, 800–1700 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1979)Google Scholar; Kselman, Thomas, Miracles and Prophecies in Nineteenth-Century France (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1983).Google Scholar

53 MacDonald, “Secularization of Suicide,” 50–100.

54 Bolle, Kees W., “Secularization as a Problem for the History of Religions,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 12:3 (1970), 242–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

55 Vovelle, Michel, La mart et I Occident de 1300 a nos jours (Paris: Gallimard, 1983)Google Scholar; Aries, Philippe, The Hour of Our Death (New York: Knopf, 1981)Google Scholar; McManners, John, Death and the Enlightenment (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981).Google Scholar

56 This shift from community to association as the source of funeral conflicts seems to reflect a general trend in the history of collective action. See Tilly, Charles, The Contentious French (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1986).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

57 Foisil, Madeleine, “Les attitudes devant la mort au XVIIIe siècle: Sépultures et suppressions de sepultures dans le cimetiere parisien des Saints-Innocents,” Revue historique, no. 510 (1974), 303–30; Ariès, Hour of Our Death, 479–500; Etlin, Architecture of Death, 12–16, 26–34.Google Scholar

58 Bellah, Robert, Beyond Belief: Essays on Religion in a Post-Traditional World (New York: Harper and Row, 1976), 168–89.Google Scholar

59 Prost, Antoine, “Les monuments aux morts,” in Les lieux de mémoire, Nora, , ed., 1:195225Google Scholar; Prost, Antoine, Mentalités et Idéologies, Vol. Ill of Les anciens combattants et la société frangaise (Paris: Presses de la Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, 1977), 3577Google Scholar; Troyansky, David G., “Monumental Politics: National History and Local Memory in French Monuments aux Morts in the Department of the Aisne since 1870,” French Historical Studies, 15:1 (1987), 121–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar