[Flemish] DE WEERT, Jacob Portrait de la pyramide dressée devant la porte du Pallais [sic]. Paris, Jean Le Clerc, (text: Engraving, 49,5 x 62,5 cm, 1 plate and 2 sheets of printed text assembled with modern gummed paper glued to the back (some sl. foxing, occ. marginal tears restored without loss, folds). Good copy. Very rare plate showing the commemorative "pyramid", actually a square construction surmounted by four statues (cardinal virtues) and an obelisk ending in a cross. With the transcription of the "Arrest de la cour" of the parliament against Châtel and Latin pieces in verse and speeches inscribed in golden letters on the base of the monument. On December Châtel (1575-1594), son of a cloth merchant, attempted to assassinate King Henri IV with a knife. Immediately arrested, he was executed by dismemberment two days later. Châtel's father's house on the Île de la Cité was demolished and replaced in by the "pyramid". As Châtel had been a pupil of the Jesuits at the college of Clermont, they were accused of having inspired his act and sentenced to banishment. One of them was hanged and then burned in the Place de Grève. The college was closed, and the building was confiscated. The Jesuit Order was banned from France, although this ban was quickly lifted. In after Henry IV recalled the Company of Jesus, Châtel's pyramid was destroyed and replaced by a fountain. Bookseller's catalogue notice pasted in the upper right margin. On the back, gummed paper with "Atelier du timbre" and "Depôt - stamps. Ref. Dufour (Bibliogr. de Paris) (text only, same address, 1597).
[Flemish] DE WEERT, Jacob Portrait de la pyramide dressée devant la porte du Pallais [sic]. Paris, Jean Le Clerc, (text: Engraving, 49,5 x 62,5 cm, 1 plate and 2 sheets of printed text assembled with modern gummed paper glued to the back (some sl. foxing, occ. marginal tears restored without loss, folds). Good copy. Very rare plate showing the commemorative "pyramid", actually a square construction surmounted by four statues (cardinal virtues) and an obelisk ending in a cross. With the transcription of the "Arrest de la cour" of the parliament against Châtel and Latin pieces in verse and speeches inscribed in golden letters on the base of the monument. On December Châtel (1575-1594), son of a cloth merchant, attempted to assassinate King Henri IV with a knife. Immediately arrested, he was executed by dismemberment two days later. Châtel's father's house on the Île de la Cité was demolished and replaced in by the "pyramid". As Châtel had been a pupil of the Jesuits at the college of Clermont, they were accused of having inspired his act and sentenced to banishment. One of them was hanged and then burned in the Place de Grève. The college was closed, and the building was confiscated. The Jesuit Order was banned from France, although this ban was quickly lifted. In after Henry IV recalled the Company of Jesus, Châtel's pyramid was destroyed and replaced by a fountain. Bookseller's catalogue notice pasted in the upper right margin. On the back, gummed paper with "Atelier du timbre" and "Depôt - stamps. Ref. Dufour (Bibliogr. de Paris) (text only, same address, 1597).
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