Thieves Make Off With Bizet's Bust in Series of Cemetery Raids
The Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris, where famous residents such as Molière, Marcel Proust, Edith Piaf and Maria Callas attract 2 million visitors a year, has been the victim of theft.
First Oscar Wilde's tomb was defaced with hundreds of lipstick kisses. Then Jim Morrison's grave had to be protected by a full-time security guard from fans who had painted arrows on other tombs pointing the way "to Jim".
Now the Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris, where famous residents such as Molière, Marcel Proust, Edith Piaf and Maria Callas attract 2 million visitors a year, has been the victim of theft.
Six bronze busts were stolen last month from its 19th century tombs, including that of Georges Bizet, the composer of Carmen.
The busts dated from the second half of the 19th century and were made by well-known artists of the time. Each is worth between €5,000 and €10,000.
The Paris city hall, which oversees the oldest cemetery in the French capital, has lodged an official complaint with police, Le Parisien reported yesterday.
"It's the work of an expert," a source familiar with the case told the newspaper. The source added that the robberies were probably carried out to order for a collector.
Hugues de Bazelaire, who works on the restoration of funeral monuments, said there was a thriving black market in pieces from French graveyards.
Jean-Claude Hitz, a trade union representative for Paris cemetery workers said that although efforts had been made to provide security for the Père-Lachaise, "20 or so wardens were not enough ... at a site whose five gates are open to the public, where the landscape is hilly and where someone can hide behind a cross or a tombstone, out of sight".
Now the Père-Lachaise cemetery in Paris, where famous residents such as Molière, Marcel Proust, Edith Piaf and Maria Callas attract 2 million visitors a year, has been the victim of theft.
Six bronze busts were stolen last month from its 19th century tombs, including that of Georges Bizet, the composer of Carmen.
The busts dated from the second half of the 19th century and were made by well-known artists of the time. Each is worth between €5,000 and €10,000.
The Paris city hall, which oversees the oldest cemetery in the French capital, has lodged an official complaint with police, Le Parisien reported yesterday.
"It's the work of an expert," a source familiar with the case told the newspaper. The source added that the robberies were probably carried out to order for a collector.
Hugues de Bazelaire, who works on the restoration of funeral monuments, said there was a thriving black market in pieces from French graveyards.
Jean-Claude Hitz, a trade union representative for Paris cemetery workers said that although efforts had been made to provide security for the Père-Lachaise, "20 or so wardens were not enough ... at a site whose five gates are open to the public, where the landscape is hilly and where someone can hide behind a cross or a tombstone, out of sight".

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- TV Contest Tries to Change the Face of Beauty
- Haider, Austria's Notorious Far-right Politician, is Killed in Road Crash
- Power Deal Crisis As Top Jobs Seized By Mugabe
- A Small Team in Germany Hits Big Time
- Townships Condemn Feuding Anc
- Tourism Curbed in Bid to Save Galapagos Haven
- Writers Pen Protests at Terror Bill
- Jörg Haider
- We're Fine, Says Moscow, As Trading Stops and Starts
- Iraq is 'safer Than Wall Street'



