235 - A Map to the Tombs of the Stars
I don’t know if the old man was having us on, but he said he was a funerary historian, researching the Père Lachaise cemetery in the same streaming rain that was washing away the lipstick traces off the Oscar Wilde monument and chilling us to the bone. “That little temple,” he said of a remarkably non-derelict house-sized funerary monument, “belongs to a descendant of Count Dracula.
“I’m quite sure you won’t find that relative of Vlad the Impaler on this list – unless under an assumed name; but this is an otherwise comprehensive overview of the most notable occupants of Paris’ biggest and most famous graveyard (although if you’re into that kind of thing and you are in the City of Lights, the cimetière at Montmartre is also worth a visit).
The map numbers the different subsections of Père Lachaise and highlights, in red, its most celebrated occupants – although the celebrity of many has not survived their death by much. Anyone ever heard of Monsieur ou Madame Ferko-Patikarus (65)? Or of Dr E. Reliquet (96)? Some names, however, do still resonate today. How about:
• Héloise and Abélard, the tragic mediaeval lovers, finally together in their very own tombe à deux? (7, near the Jewish section);
• Composers Rossini (4) and Bizet (68);
• The Egyptologist Champollion, the (somewhat disputed) decipherer of the Rosetta Stone (18);
• The illustrator Gustave Doré (22).
As far as I can tell, the map is undated; but it certainly looks like it’s pre-World War II, maybe even pre-World War I. Although Doors-frontman Jim Morrison is buried at Père Lachaise, it’s therefore unlikely he is the Morrison mentioned in section 68.
An intriguing label is that of the Victimes de l’Opéra-comique (96; possibly the last serious attempt at French comedy). Most of the other names are complete mysteries as well; please feel free, if you recognise anyone, to offer some biographical data, which, ultimately, might help in determining the map’s age.
Click on map to enlarge. This map was found here.


Re: “Victimes de l’Opéra Comique”. That probably refers to a fire in 1887. New York Times: THE OPERA COMIQUE FIRE.; SIXTY-EIGHT BODIES THUS FAR RECOVERED–MANY MORE IN THE RUINS.
Comment by Jacob Christensen — January 23, 2008 @
You missed Molière!
Comment by Stefan — January 23, 2008 @
In section 85, you can see Adrien Proust’s name. He was Marcel Proust’s father, who was also buried in section 85. Adrien died in 1903 and his son (which became much more famous than him) died in 1922. So the map was probably drawn between those dates.
Regarding celebrities, Molière and Honoré de Balzac stand also on the map.
Here is a list (fr) of famous people who are still there.
Comment by Bertrand — January 23, 2008 @
There’s also Talleyrand (near #31), and, I presume, Auguste Comte (#17). What a treasure trove!
Comment by koloman — January 23, 2008 @
Emile Reliquet was a famous French urologist; Patikarus was a Gypsy violinist - the name means ‘chemist’, and was given because his playing was said to have cured a Hungarian nobleman of melancholy.
Comment by Rodney — January 23, 2008 @
A clue to dating might be in the lower right margin, to the to the imprimatur: “12-22″ might mean
December 1922.
Comment by mcb — January 23, 2008 @
Jim Morrisson is buried in section 6, just above the upper tip of section 5.
Comment by manur — January 23, 2008 @
Well It would be a long range work to talk about avery single grave.
Though, it’s possible to emphasize on the pools of graves :
- the Napoleon’s generals (H-J, 5-6)
- the artists (section 4) (even if there are all over the graveyard)
- what will become the communist pool (section 97 In front of the Mur des Fédérés - where the insurgents of la Commune -1871- where shooted) near Karl Marx’s son in law, and the monuments dedicated to the victims of the nazi’s camps.
Please note the “rue du repos” (”rest street”) which is well located!
Comment by Geabulek — January 23, 2008 @
Apparently someone’s bust is missing.
http://pariscemeteries.blogspot.com/2007/02/lucpipia-missing-in-division-89.html
Comment by Nobody — January 24, 2008 @
near section 16, here is the graves of De Lesseps, his full name is Ferdinand De Lesseps, architect of the Suez’canal and the unfinished (at his try) Panama’s Canal.
Comment by clovis — January 24, 2008 @
You can take a “virtual tour” of Père-Lachaise at this website: http://www.pere-lachaise.com
As I was comparing the virtual map and the map in this post, the most recent name that matched was James de Rothschild (in the Jewish Section, who died in 1934.
It’s interesting that the names of some artists are left off of this map - such as Modigliani (1924) and Pissarro (1903).
Comment by L-A — January 24, 2008 @
Section 57 you have Grouchy who was a marechal under Napoleon. He was held responsible for the French defeat at Waterloo.
Section 49 you have E.Delacroix who must be the painter Eugene Delacroix.
Between sections 10 and 47, there is Felix Faure, a French president who is more famous for his death than his life: he died making love with his mistress! Now that’s being caught in the act.
Comment by Phil — January 24, 2008 @
Gertrude Stein’s grave isn’t marked so the map is definitely pre-1946.
Comment by Dave "The Knave" White — January 24, 2008 @
And how can you miss Chopin’s grave, near which is now the bare burial of French jazz pianist Michel Petrucciani?
Comment by Catalepton — January 24, 2008 @
Sarah Bernhardt is on the map, so it’s post-1923.
# Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923), actrice (division 44)
But I can’t see Bartholomé, so it could be pre-1928.
#Albert Bartholomé (1848-1928), sculpteur (division 4)
No Courteline either (1929)
No Radiguet (1923)
Marcel Proust (1922) isn’t on the map but there is a A. Proust. Could be a family grave.
Ok so I guess the 12-22 could be the answer. Except that the author knew that Sarah Bernhardt would die 3 months later…
It’s a great place to visit. Very peaceful in the center of the city. The funnny thing about all these graves is that the biggest ones aren’t for the most famous people but for the richest.
Comment by Glorb — January 24, 2008 @
Oscar Wilde, section 89
Haussman is usefull for this blog, he planned a modern paris under Napoleon the third, he’s in section 4 and the person responsible for most of the grandes boulevards(St. Germain, St. Michel, etc.)
Breguet the watchmaker is in 11
There’s a Mme Lavoisier which might or might not be the widow of the chemist
Comment by Ate — January 24, 2008 @
By the way… is there a “Map of Celebrity Overdoses” somewhere?
:-S
Comment by A.R.Yngve — January 24, 2008 @
Brillat-Savarin in the section 28 is this Brillat-Savarin :-) :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Anthelme_Brillat-Savarin
Comment by -rip- — January 24, 2008 @
Mlle Lenormand in section 3 was and still is a famous “spiritualist”. I think she was one of the most famous Tarot-readers of her day.
In section 26 you find Gay-Lussac, which I presume is the chemist who gave us his laws on gasses.
And in section 23 you find Ingres, who is presumably the famous painter.
Comment by Ludwig — January 24, 2008 @
The Proust grave is a family one–he and his parents are buried together. The younger Proust died in November 1922, but the 12-22 theory could still hold, as his father had been an emiment physician–Proust had won the Prix Goncourt in 1918, but his father may still have been the better-known figure in 1922.
Comment by ec — January 24, 2008 @
As I was an adolescent visiting Paris with my parents and my brothers,I remember that while they all went shopping I always went to The Pere Lachaise… I was fascinated by the idea of walking between all these famous bones…
I wonder… have you all, who comment here, be there too?
Comment by Miki — January 24, 2008 @
Oscar Wilde is there.
and so is Edith Piaf.
Comment by Eric — January 24, 2008 @
Here is a searchable map:
http://www.pere-lachaise.com/perelachaise.php?lang=en
It’s really cool! Clicking on a famous grave will pull up a picture of it.
It’s good to see Victor Noir on this map… his reputation was already big by then.
Several authors and artists aren’t on this map, though including Modigliani and Apollinaire. However, certain artists may not have been famous (esp. the avant-garde ones), so they wouldn’t be on a map from 1922-1923.
Comment by Andrew — January 24, 2008 @
@Miki
When I visited Paris as a student I made a point of visiting the three “big” cemeteries of Paris: Père-Lachaise, Montparnasse and Montmartre. It may seem a bit strange, but I like to visit graveyards, both in my own country (Belgium) as abroad. You often get to see fine examples of funerary art, and you can sort compare national differences.
Comment by Ludwig — January 25, 2008 @
@Ludwig
How nice to read an answer to my question, and such a one! I am like you, I always love to visit cemeteries, they say so much about a folk’s soul! You are Belgian? Do you know waht I will do one day? I will visit Jacques Brel’s graveyard in Les Marquises, I will! My brother already went there and brought me some earth from the graveyard, in a small bottle, which i again gave to my best friend, a Belgian woman from Ostende, who fanatically loves Jacques Brel!
Comment by Miki — January 25, 2008 @
They have tidied up Jim Morrison’s grave since I first went there. Back in the 80’s there was no official recognition and no signs, so visitors painted arrows on other gravestones: a right mess. It was also obligatory to smoke a joint and talk in hushed tones
Comment by Lordhutton — January 25, 2008 @
And Montparnasse Cemetery really is worth a visit
Comment by Lordhutton — January 25, 2008 @
This map is in the “Guide Bleu Michelin” of Paris, possibly 1930.
The typography is recognizable.
In this book, you can also find the map of several gardens of Paris : Jardin du Luxembourg, Jardin des Tuileries, etc, with all their statues..
Michelin is a tyre manufacturer.
Comment by nicole — January 25, 2008 @
Yes, but is Jim Morrison’s grave empty?
Comment by Peter — January 25, 2008 @
A sunny day in june I slipped away to Père Lachaise. At the gate a pretty girl asked me “Where is Jim?”
My name is Jim but it was not me she wanted. He died in 1971.
But I said yes and we wandered into the necropolis. She did not speeak English. Other than the phrase “Where is jim?” which she repeated several times.
We strolled through the graves. I had no idea where jim was but there seemed to be a stream of people moving in a single direction and I guessed that was where “jim” was and still is.
She squeeled when we found the spot. No party. No freaks. Just a guard watching the grave. She took some pictures and ignored me. Everyone was taking pictures and the guard looked really bored.
It funny I think that the poster boy for the rebel alliance has a guard over his bones and nobody does anything at his shrine other than take photos…..
Comment by Jim — January 25, 2008 @
Apparently Dave Chapelle is buried there, in the big red tomb near the middle.
Comment by analogkid138 — January 25, 2008 @
EN NUESTRO PRÓXIMO POST VAMOS A PONER EL MAPA DE EUROPA 1870, TE AVISAMOS NOMÁS, TE VAMOS A NOMBRAR
ESO
Comment by liyoblog — January 25, 2008 @
i saw Jim in ASDA the other day. Leather trousers, ponytail, buying firelighters. Sorry
Comment by lordhutton — January 25, 2008 @
ahora sí, ahí está: pusimos ESO
Comment by liyoblog — January 26, 2008 @
Hello map lovers! Check this out — someone at “PakTribune” has a sense of humor!
Comment by stevieray — January 26, 2008 @
The date could be as proposed December 1922 for the general map with some names added afterwards.
As someone as written, this is definitely from a Guide Bleu; note though that “Guides Bleus” were not (and still are not) edited by Michelin but by Hachette (see upper right hand corner “Librairie Hachette); Michelin edits the “Guides Verts” (green covers - general tourism information) and the “Guides Rouges” (listings and appreciation of hotels and restaurants)
Comment by Bernard Massé — January 26, 2008 @
[...] O mapa é do primeiro terço do século XX e mostra a localização dos túmulos dos famosos no Cemitério Pére Lachaise, em Paris. [...]
Pingback by Teste de Cultura Francesa « O Blog do Dodô — January 27, 2008 @
Julien Dupre was an artist who died in 1910, if that helps any. The other names I noticed as fairly well-known have already been mentioned (Balzac, Delacroix, Moliere…), but there’s also Abadie, a French architect from the 1800s.
Comment by Sam — January 27, 2008 @
I think I’ve spotted a couple others as well. (Who wants to cheat and use a fancy-schmancy website anyways?)
* Scientist Pierre Dulong(?)(8)
* There’s an ‘Flle Pascal’ (2) - perhaps a child of Blaise?
* As mentioned, Talleyrand (31)
* Honore de Balzac (48)
* My French is a little rusty, but theres a tomb dedicated to French soldiers from the war of 1870 - presumably this is for the Franco-Prussian War? (64)
* Oscar Wilde (I think he has ben mentioned as well - 89)
Comment by Dan — January 30, 2008 @
Some that I did recognize: Cuvier (famous zoologist/anatomist), his rivals Ducrotay de Blainville and Geoffroy St. Hilaire, the botanists Adanson and Brongniart, physicist Arago, and philosopher La Rochefoucauld.
Comment by Lars Dietz — February 1, 2008 @
[...] wonderful Strange Maps blog recently featured an old map (probably from before WW1) of Paris’ most famous cemetery: Père-Lachaise. In those days it [...]
Pingback by Frogsmoke.com - Behind The Gallic Fumes — March 3, 2008 @
@ Dan (although you probably won’t read this): “Flle” stands for “Famille” (Family).
Comment by Peppermint — March 14, 2008 @
For what it’s worth, the map was printed before 1969 : the subway station Martin-Nadaud, which appears at the top-left corner, was closed in 1969. For those who can read French, here is a link to the wikipedia page : http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Nadaud_%28m%C3%A9tro_de_Paris%29
Comment by Henri — May 26, 2008 @