Talk:Place de la Concorde

Untitled
The discussion of the Revolutionary era seems to be on the melodramatic and the exaggerated side. David.Monniaux 22:45, 19 Mar 2005 (UTC)
 * Not only that, but the dates are all wrong. I'm editing the paragraph. RodC 14:52, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)
 * Curiously, the article's history is not showing my edits. The article itself looks fine, though. RodC 15:19, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)

originally the Hotel De Crillon was not a hotel in the modern meaning of the word. there was no such a thing then. Hotel(proper name is hotel particulier) in French originally meant a town mansion built for aristocratic families. They stayed there when in town (their primary residence was a castle in whatever province of France their family came from). The hotel de Crillon was built for the Duke of Crillon. There are many other similar "hotels" in Paris (and all over France)that never were and still are not hotels for tourists but mansions that are either still privately owned or are museums, government buildings etc. for example Hotel Sale(Picasso museum), Hotel de Sens(library), Hotel de Soubise (archives), Hotel Carnavalet (museum), Hotel de Matignon (prime minister office)and many mores. J-L B. april 30 2006.

The store of the CONCORDE ,are luxury. I have learn the English at a work in the store CONCORDE. CONCORDE ,I went work in a the of her store. I liKe the cloching of design for sell at custumer.

The store CONCORDE ,can call me for a work. I can work now ,I'm ready and trush. I'm get in the store PARIS Concorde ,for a work in of sell of cloching. I've see the manager for a work in her store. The manager the store Concorde PARIS ,can call now.

I would meet the manager now. Can I work for you in your store of PARIS CONCORDE. I speak, I write and lire British. I can get now for work.

I live at PARIS ,I Know PARIS and I'm French. I'm agreat ,I'm fine et my mind is sérieux.

Mademoiselle Emelyne Rosemonde Hatchi

Vandalism
This page has had virtually no useful edits since 8 October 2007, but it has been vandalized by 9 different IPs. There has also been a good-faithed edit by a registered user (Gavigan01), but I reverted it because it was simply adding a very low-quality night photo to the article -- there are better ones on Wikimedia Commons, in case someone feels a night photo is necessary. Part of the vandalism was reverted within minutes, but the rest went completely unnoticed. The last contributor to this page said:
 * (cur) (last) 19:24, 8 October 2007 Ghirlandajo (Talk | contribs) (8,270 bytes) (since nobody seems to watch this page, it should be semiprotected) (undo)

so I'll follow his advice and request semiprotection as nothing has changed since then. --Sgt. Salt (talk) 19:16, 19 December 2007 (UTC)

Statue location?
So where was that statue at? It looks like the platform has since been removed. --98.232.180.37 (talk) 08:37, 29 January 2009 (UTC)

Confusing obelisk

 * The center of the Place is occupied by a giant Egyptian obelisk decorated with hieroglyphics exalting the reign of the pharaoh Ramses II. It is one of two the Egyptian government gave to the French in the nineteenth century. The other one stayed in Egypt, too difficult and heavy to move to France with the technology at that time. In the 1990s, President François Mitterrand gave the second obelisk back to the Egyptians.

So, the Egyptian government gave two obelisks to the French, but one stayed in Egypt, and then France gave back the second one. What's the deal, then, with the one that's currently there? Tempshill (talk) 03:55, 8 February 2009 (UTC)
 * It is quite clear (and I'm a stickler for clarity). Here, I'll spell it out:

1. Egypt gave France TWO obelisks. 2. France was able to transport ONE obelisk to Paris. (2-1 = 1 - so ONE is left in Egypt). 3. After many years, the French just give the untransported obelisk back to Egypt. Nice of 'em.

Therefore, there is ONE obelisk (the smaller one) in Place de la Concorde, and another (number TWO) in Egypt.

All of that was from the Wiki article, but in non-encyclopedic style - it's fine as is. Putting it the way I just put it is not the right tone.

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obelisk
This article states, without citation, that Francois Mitterand gave the Place de la Concorde obelisk back to Egypt. But Mitterand was president of France only until 1995, and the obelisk was still in the Place de la Concorde for the 1998 World Cup, as noted in the article itself. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.201.149.219 (talk) 13:11, 17 July 2018 (UTC)

Proposal to delete section "References in popular culture"
I would like to respectfully propose that we delete the section "References in popular culture." This section is simply trivia, the names of movies, books or songs that mention or show the Place de la Concorde. It adds no information whatsoever about the subject, and its only use is to mention the assorted films, books and songs. I think the article will not suffer in any way if this section disappears. Does anyone disagree? Cordially, 16:15, 3 March 2022 (UTC)