Print this page or go back to standard view.
PCT4261731: Self-reclame published in December 1940 for the 3 press titles created by Jacques Coeur (pseudonym of Abbé Jean Courtois) and Jean Vaillant (pseudonym of Jean Pihan). Family reading newspapers. The magazine exalts Catholic religion, patriotism, scouting and admiration at Marechal Petain. drawing by Robert Rigot. / Bridgeman Images
PCT4262045: Marseille circa 1900: view of the city with the cathedrale (new Major batie between 1852 and 1893 in the Byzantine style) Sainte Marie Maggiore (Sainte-Marie-Maggiore) (known as “” la Major”) and entrance to the port with lighthouse, sailing and steam boats - anonymous stereo cliche on glass plate, 2 times 4x4,5 cm. / Bridgeman Images
PCT4262151: Dealers of rosaries and pious objects in Bethleem at the beginning of the 20th century. The manufacture of these precious memories made of mother-of-pearl, coral or black stone for the pelerins was one of the main industries of the Christian population of Palestine. Black and white photography retouched. / Bridgeman Images
PCT4262860: Life in the year 2000: anticipation vignettes glued into a album-reclaim of chocolate Cantaloup-Catala, 1954. Nautostrade (highway for land transport of boats from Bordeaux-Atlantic, to Beziers- Mediterranee), rocket launcher to shoot in the corners, aerogare in the city centre, flying saucers producing rain, penetration into the virgin forest by atomic rays, etc. Gusman/Leemage / Bridgeman Images
PCT4262938: Reconstruction of a classroom in the beginning of the 20th century. The teacher, next to his office, interrogates a student on the blackboard. On another painting, under the tricolour flag and the Marianne of the French Republic, a sentence by Victor Hugo: “Every child you teach is a man you win”. School Museum, Carcassonne. Photo by Patrice Cartier. / Bridgeman Images
PCT4263093: Groupe Scolaire Jean Jaures de Carcassonne, created by architect Paul Enderlin and inaugurated in 1928 when the President of the Republic Gaston Doumergue came. This school is distinguished by its size which makes it by far the largest school in the city, by its large windows but also by its facade adorned with mosaics representing oranges, in hues evoking impressionist painters, as the architect cottoya in his youth. Making the corner between two buildings housing the classrooms, a massive building houses the teachers' office quarters. On the right, in the shadow part, you can see an arcade that is the entrance to the washing house where the teaching staff came to wash their laundry. / Bridgeman Images