7 The first hour of freedom, July 14, 1789. Reasoned classification: The postcard reproduces the engraving of Carpentier or Carpantier, L., which represents the release of the Bastille prisoners on July 14, 1789. The released prisoners were triumphantly taken from the Bastille, represented in the subsequent plane of the subsequent plane of the Engraving, to the City Council, touring Saint-Antoine street. There were seven: Claude Auguste Tavernier, Count Jacques-François-Xavier Whyte de Malleville, the count of Solages, Jean La Corrège, Jean Bechade, Jean-Antoine Pujarol and Bernard Laroche. Th


7 The first hour of freedom, July 14, 1789. Reasoned classification: The postcard reproduces the engraving of Carpentier or Carpantier, L., which represents the release of the Bastille prisoners on July 14, 1789. The released prisoners were triumphantly taken from the Bastille, represented in the subsequent plane of the subsequent plane of the Engraving, to the City Council, touring Saint-Antoine street. There were seven: Claude Auguste Tavernier, Count Jacques-François-Xavier Whyte de Malleville, the count of Solages, Jean La Corrège, Jean Bechade, Jean-Antoine Pujarol and Bernard Laroche. The engraving belongs to the collection of "historical paintings of the French Revolution". The series narrates through the stamp the main events of the French Revolution since the transformation of the general states into the National Assembly on June 20, 1789. This editorial project began in 1791 and some of the most prominent names of The arts and letters of the moment. The obverse presents a numbered photo (7) with information related to the title of the painting and to the historical date it represents. At the end of this information the initials appear "ll". This brand was the one used by the photographic company Léon et Lévy, founded in 1864 and specialized in stereoscopic and postal illustrated views. Lévy became the second most important postcards editor in France, only surpassed by the Neurdein brothers. The Émile Crété printer acquired these two companies and merged them under the name of Lévy et Neurdein Réunis around 1920. The "LL" brand continued to be used in this new stage.


Size: 1966px × 1271px
Photo credit: © EU/BT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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