On Monday 8th February 1779 a hundred couples were married simultaneously in a single splendid ceremony at Notre-Dame. I first came across a reference to this event in a copy of the early 20th-century guide book by E.V. Lucas, A Wanderer in Paris. "Some very ugly events are in store for us;" we are told in the section on Notre-Dame, "let something pretty intervene". The original source is an even more mawkish French work by a certain Pauline de Grandpré. She paints a beautiful, romantic vision: a hundred brides and grooms, married at the behest of a beneficent royalty, in bright, candle-lit, flower strewn cathedral.
Somehow this is a past that never quite was.... I decided to investigate.
19th-century visions of the Royal Family. Imaginary scene by Charles Louis Lucien Muller (1857) |
"The Queen was persuaded by the love for her show by the citizens, to reply with an act of benevolence which would particularly extend to the people".
Marie-Antoinette refused the celebrations offered to her by the municipality of Paris and asked instead that the money be employed to provide dowries for a hundred deserving poor girls, who would be married en masse on the day of the Royal thanksgiving service in Notre-Dame. Additional allowances were be paid when a first child was born, with a higher rate available for mothers who breastfed. As a further celebration of family life, an elderly couple would be chosen to renew their marriage vows in front of their "children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren".