Café du Croissant

The Café du Croissant or Crosse du Croisant (today the Taverne du Croissant) is a café in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. It is famous for having been the place of the assassination of Jean Jaurès by Raoul Villain on July 31, 1914.

Café du Croissant
Location within Paris
Restaurant information
Street address146 rue Montmartre–22 rue du Croissant
2nd arrondissement of Paris
Coordinates48°52′09″N 2°20′35.8″E

On February 20, 1938, the owner Albert Wiedmer donated the marble plaque of the table on which Jaurès was assassinated to the municipality of Champigny-sur-Marne at the request of the city's mayor Albert Thomas, a friend of Jaurès.[1] It was classified as a Historic Monument object in 1988.[2] Yet the waiters still have the patrons believe the café has kept the original table with a dark stain on a brighter wood that is said to be Jaurès's blood.[3]

The assassination is still remembered in the café: in 1923, a commemorative plaque was added to the façade by the Human Rights League;[4] a red and golden floor mosaic shows the date of Jaurès's death and the exact place where he fell.[5] Additionally, a window shelters a part of Jaurès's chair, his hat with a bullet inside,[6] and the two front pages of the newspaper L'Humanité of July 31 and August 1, 1914.[7]

On July 31, 1984, President François Mitterrand visited the Café du Croissant to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the assassination. In a radio show, he told that in 1934 he had rushed to the café to pay tribute to Jaurès.[8][9]

The establishment was re-opened in 2011 as the Taverne du Croissant.[10] On July 31, 2014, President François Hollande and Germany's Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel visited the café upon the centenary of the assassination of Jaurès.[11] The restaurant offered a special dinner menu for the centenary.[5]

The commemorative plaque added by the Human Rights League on the façade.

References

  1. "Table du café du Croissant". Topic-topos.com (in French).
  2. Palissy
  3. Deforges, Régine (2011). Le Paris de mes amours : Abécédaire sentimental (in French). Paris: Plon. p. 123. ISBN 978-2-259-20769-0.
  4. Carrère, Christian (July 30, 1994). "L'hommage des communistes, hier au café du Croissant". L'Humanité (in French).
  5. Boudet, Alexandre (July 30, 2014). "Le Café du croissant où Jean Jaurès a été assassiné ne surfe plus sur cet épisode". huffingtonpost.fr. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
  6. Chao, Ramón; Ramonet, Ignacio (2008). Guide du Paris rebelle (in French). Paris: Plon. ISBN 978-2-259-20629-7.
  7. Barret, Anne-Laure (August 19, 2012). "Au café du Croissant, pourquoi ont-ils tué Jaurès ?". Le Journal du dimanche (in French).
  8. Epstein, Simon (2008). Un paradoxe français : Antiracistes dans la Collaboration, antisémites dans la Résistance. Bibliothèque Histoire (in French). Paris: Albin-Michel. p. 547. ISBN 978-2-226-17915-9.
  9. Nay, Catherine (1984). Le Noir et le Rouge : ou l'histoire d'une ambition (in French). Paris: Grasset. p. 64. ISBN 2-246-28191-1.
  10. Frappat, Bruno (September 23, 2011). "Une bonne bière". La Croix.
  11. Laure Equy (July 31, 2014). "Au Café du Croissant, on ne partage pas Jaurès". Libération (in French). Retrieved September 28, 2019.
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