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Eiffel Tower, Paris Exhibition, France, 1889

Description (English)

Plate taken from the ‘Illustrated London News’. The Eiffel tower, built by Gustave Alexandre Eiffel (1832-1923) for the Exposition Universelle, on the Champs-de-Mars, Paris. France. The communications tower, which flooded the exhibition with its electric lights, was regarded as a symbol for the twentieth century, but also had its critics at the time, the author Guy de Maupassant describing it as a ‘squelette disgracieux’ (graceless skeleton). Construction started on the 26 January 1887 and was complete on 19 June 1888. It was further enlarged for the 1937 exhibition. The glass and steel canopy around designed by Cotamin to cover the Galerie de Machines lasted only twenty-one years.


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Object Information

Date
1889

Contributor
Illustrated London News

Publisher
Science Museum London/ Science & Society Picture Library

Rights
Science Museum London / Science & Society Picture Library

Identifier
10415365

Creator
Illustrated London News

Type
Image

Source
Illustrated London News