Passy Cemetery

{{Short description|Cemetery in Paris, France}}

{{more footnotes needed|date=February 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}

{{Infobox cemetery

| name = Passy Cemetery

| image = File:Aerial view of Cimetière de Passy.jpg

| imagesize = 240px

| caption = Aerial view of Passy Cemetery

| map_type = Paris

| map_size =

| map_caption = Passy in Paris

| established = 1820

| country = France

| location = Passy, Paris

| coordinates = {{coord|48|51|45|N|2|17|07|E|region:FR_scale:2000|display=inline,title}}

| type = Public

| style =

| owner = Mairie de Paris

| size = {{convert|1.75|ha|acre}}

| graves = 2600

| website = [http://equipement.paris.fr/cimetiere-de-passy-4481 Passy cemetery on the Mairie de Paris]

| findagraveid= 638993

}}

Passy Cemetery ({{langx|fr|Cimetière de Passy}}) is a small cemetery in Passy, in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, France.

History

The current cemetery replaced the old cemetery (l'ancien cimetière communal de Passy, located on Rue Lekain), which was closed in 1802.{{citation needed|date = November 2024}}

In the early 19th century, on the orders of Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, all the cemeteries in Paris were replaced by several large new ones outside the precincts of the capital. Montmartre Cemetery was built in the north, Père Lachaise Cemetery in the east, and Montparnasse Cemetery in the south. Passy Cemetery was a later addition, but has its origins in the same edict.{{citation needed|date = November 2024}}

The current entrance (designed by René Berger) was built in 1934. The retaining wall of the cemetery is adorned with a bas relief (by Louis Janthial) commemorating the soldiers who fell in World War I.{{citation needed|date = November 2024}}

Notes

Opened in 1820 in the expensive residential and commercial districts of the Right Bank near the Champs-Élysées, by 1874 the small Passy Cemetery had become the aristocratic necropolis of Paris. It is the only cemetery in Paris to have a heated waiting-room.

Sheltered by a bower of chestnut trees, the cemetery is in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower.

The cemetery was once the home of a statue by Dunikowski titled The Soul Escaping the Body. It was on top of the ceremonial grave of Antoni Cierplikowski. The statue was known by many but was removed when the grave was cleared in 2004.[http://pariscemeteries.blogspot.nl/2011/07/mystery-of-antoine-cierplikowski-passy.html The Mystery of Antoine Cierplikowski]

It is known as a small but well visited cemetery (Petit mais bien fréquenté).

Notable interments

Among its more famous burials are:

Image:Mo cuu hoang Bao Dai.jpg|Grave of Bảo Đại, last Emperor of Vietnam

Image:ManetPassy.jpg|Grave of Édouard Manet

File:Debussy's grave.jpg|Grave of Claude Debussy

Image:Leila Pahlavi.jpg|Grave of Leila Pahlavi

Antigua tumba de Guzmán Blanco. Cementerio de Passy, París.jpg|Grave of Antonio Guzmán Blanco

Image:Grave monument of Fernandel.JPG|Grave monument of Fernandel

File:Guerlain_Mausoleum.jpg|Mausoleum of the Guerlain clan

File:Bashkirtseff-grave.jpg|Tomb of Marie Bashkirtseff, a recreation of her studio

Location

The entrance of the cemetery is located at 2, Rue du Commandant Schlœsing. The street in which it is situated is named for a Free French pilot, Squadron Leader Jacques-Henri Schlœsing (1919–1944), who flew with the wartime RAF until killed in action, the day that Paris was liberated.

The cemetery is behind the Trocadéro.

References

{{Reflist}}