Chapter

World Wars & Occupation Memory

Two world wars and the Occupation created new memory rituals that reshaped Île-de-France's festival landscape. The Vel d'Hiv roundup (July 1942) — organized by French police under Vichy authority at the behest of German occupational forces — created a wound in Jewish community memory that was only officially acknowledged by President Chirac in 1995 after decades of denial. The Mémorial de la Shoah (inaugurated 2005 in the Marais) and its Drancy satellite (2012, opposite the Cité de la Muette internment camp) institutionalize Holocaust remembrance, though vandalism at Drancy shows the conflict is ongoing. Mont-Valérien, where more than 1,000 Resistance fighters were executed, became the national memorial of the Resistance and the site of annual commemoration. Post-war, massive immigration from North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Caribbean began transforming the banlieues — Seine-Saint-Denis, Val-d'Oise, Essonne — planting the seeds of multicultural festival life that would reshape the region's cultural calendar. The forain community kept the Foire du Trône running even through wartime disruptions. Visit the Mémorial de la Shoah and you confront the wall of names; climb Mont-Valérien and you stand at the execution site where General de Gaulle chose to honor the Resistance.

1914 - 1962
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minority hinge

Drancy Mémorial de la Shoah

A satellite of the Paris Mémorial de la Shoah, inaugurated September 2012 opposite the Cité de la Muette — the housing project that served as the principal internment camp for Jews before deportation from France. Of the 76,000 Jews deported from France, approximately 63,000 transited through Drancy. The memorial makes the suburban site of internment legible, though vandalism (swastikas in recent years) shows that the memory conflict is ongoing. Maintained by the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah. Anchor modes: material_layer; custodian; living_ritual | Search hooks: Drancy Mémorial de la Shoah; Cité de la Muette internment; Holocaust deportation camp; Seine-Saint-Denis memory site; suburban memorial vandalism

Visit the memorial opposite the Cité de la Muette where approximately 63,000 of the 76,000 Jews deported from France transited; access the documentation center and testimony archive; see the suburban internment site made legible through memorialization

minority hinge

Mémorial de la Shoah

The Wall of Names (mur des noms) listing 76,000 Jews deported from France, in the Marais — the historic heart of Paris's Jewish community. Inaugurated in 2005, it anchors Holocaust remembrance in the urban fabric and is the site of the annual Vel d'Hiv commemoration (July). The memorial also serves as a documentation center and museum. It institutionalizes the memory of the Vel d'Hiv roundup (organized by French police under Vichy authority at the behest of German occupational forces, July 1942), officially acknowledged only in 1995 by President Chirac. Maintained by the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian; signal | Search hooks: Mémorial de la Shoah; Vel d'Hiv commemoration; Wall of Names deportation; Holocaust remembrance Paris; Jewish memory Marais

Face the Wall of Names listing 76,000 Jews deported from France; visit the documentation center and museum; attend the annual Vel d'Hiv commemoration in July

other

Mont-Valérien, Mem. of the Resistance

The site where more than 1,000 Resistance fighters and hostages were executed by German forces during the Occupation (1940–1944). Chosen by General de Gaulle as the national memorial of the Resistance, it is the site of annual commemoration ceremonies. The memorial complex includes the chapel, the clearing where executions took place, and the monument. Maintained by the French Ministry of Armed Forces. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Mont-Valérien, Mem. of the Resistance; Resistance execution site; national memorial commemoration; Occupation memory Suresnes; de Gaulle memorial ceremony

Stand in the clearing where more than 1,000 Resistance fighters were executed; visit the chapel and monument; attend annual commemoration ceremonies at the national memorial of the Resistance

Celebrations and traditions

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Chapter

Revolutionary Secularization & Calendar Wars

1789 - 1914

The Revolution attempted to replace the Catholic calendar with a republican one (1793), suppressing feast days, melting down the Sainte-Geneviève Châsse for its metal (1793), and converting churches into Temples of Reason. But this secularization was incomplete and contested. The Concordat of 1801 restored Catholic worship — promulgated on Easter 1802 at Notre-Dame — and many suppressed feast days survived as secularized municipal fêtes patronales. The Sainte-Geneviève relics, secretly saved from the Revolution, were transferred to Saint-Étienne-du-Mont in 1803, where the Novena (December 26 – January 3) and annual Châsse procession were revived and continue to this day. The Panthéon — secularized from church to national temple — embodies the era's duality: a building that oscillated between Catholic and republican functions. The Foire du Lendit, unlike the Foire du Trône, never recovered from the Revolution's disruptions. Meanwhile, industrial Paris built new monuments (Arc de Triomphe, Eiffel Tower, Sacré-Cœur) that became sites of national ritual. Stand at Place de la Bastille and you are at the rupture point where the old calendar was overthrown; enter Saint-Étienne-du-Mont and you can see the 19th-century reliquary that carries forward a 1,500-year procession tradition.

Chapter

Post-Colonial Immigration & Multicultural Festival Landscape

From 1962

Post-colonial immigration and the expansion of the Grande Couronne have created a plural festival landscape in Île-de-France that the old 'Catholicism plus laïcité' frame cannot capture. The Carnaval Tropical de Paris (founded 2001, drawing ~200,000 spectators along the Champs-Élysées and Trocadéro) brings Caribbean carnival traditions — Guadeloupean, Martinican, Guyanese — into the heart of the capital. The Festival des Cultures Juives (20+ editions, supported by the Région Île-de-France) celebrates Jewish heritage in public venues across Paris. Muslim communities observe Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha in mosques and community spaces across Seine-Saint-Denis, Val-d'Oise, and Essonne. Meanwhile, Catholic ritual traditions persist in new forms: the Sainte-Geneviève Novena at Saint-Étienne-du-Mont, the Fête-Dieu observance and monthly eucharistic procession at the Sacré-Cœur, and parish feast days that still structure local calendars. The Foire du Trône — now France's largest travelling funfair, running April–May on the Pelouse de Reuilly — maintains its annual calendar through forain family dynasties who are the living custodians of a 1,000+ year tradition. In the Grande Couronne, Houdan's Foire Saint-Matthieu (chartered c. 1065) reaches its 960th-odd edition, and Rambouillet's Fête du Muguet (since 1906, with procession to Saint-Lubin church and vénerie/hunt tradition) blends spring tradition with the forest heritage of former sovereigns. Provins's Médiévales — a heritage revival founded c. 1986 that draws on the town's documented medieval past, distinct from genuinely continuous traditions — shows how communities invent new traditions from documented histories. The Grande Arche de la Défense frames this era: a monument to modern, plural Île-de-France, standing at the western end of the axis that begins at the Louvre.

Chapter

Royal Absolutism & Baroque Ritual

1500 - 1789

Royal absolutism created a new kind of ritual: the court ceremony at Versailles, where the lever and coucher of the king functioned as a secular liturgy, and the royal hunt at Fontainebleau enshrined seasonal privilege over the forest. The Sainte-Geneviève Châsse processions — great city-crossing crisis rites that could draw the entire population into the streets — reached their baroque zenith in the 17th and 18th centuries. The Foire du Trône evolved from the medieval Foire Saint-Antoine into the Foire aux Pains d'Épice (gingerbread fair), and was relocated to the Place du Trône — named for the throne erected for Louis XIV's 1660 entry into Paris. Parish fêtes patronales across the Île-de-France countryside maintained the medieval saint-day cycle even as baroque Catholicism intensified its ritual spectacle with elaborate Fête-Dieu (Corpus Christi) processions through decorated streets. Walk the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles and you are in a space designed to make the king's body a ritual spectacle; visit Fontainebleau and the royal hunting forest still surrounds the château.

Chapter

Capetian State & Gothic Charter Fair Network

987 - 1500

The Capetian dynasty transformed Île-de-France's ritual landscape with Gothic cathedrals and a charter fair network that fused religious observance with commercial exchange and popular festivity. The Foire du Trône (chartered c. 957 under King Lothaire, confirmed 1131 under Louis VI for the Abbey of Saint-Antoine-des-Champs), the Foire du Lendit at Saint-Denis (chartered 1053, coinciding with the opening of Saint Denis's reliquary), the Foire Saint-Matthieu at Houdan (chartered c. 1065 by Amaury II de Montfort), and the Champagne fairs at Provins (11th–13th centuries) created a web of annual gatherings tied to saints' feast days, relic displays, and agricultural calendars. These fairs are the origin of the fête votive/patronale template that survives across the Grande Couronne: the saint's name and calendar date persist even after the religious content has been secularized into municipal community weekends. Notre-Dame and the Sainte-Chapelle — built to house the Crown of Thorns — embody the Capetian fusion of royal power, Gothic architecture, and liturgical spectacle. Visit Provins and the medieval fair-town layout is still legible in the streets; go to Houdan each September and you can attend a chartered fair that has run without significant interruption since the 11th century.