[Southwest Exterior Corner of the Temple of Bel, Palmyra, Syria]

Louis Vignes French
Possibly printed by Charles Nègre French

Not on view

A naval officer and amateur photographer, Louis Vignes first made photographs, using paper negatives, on campaigns through Sicily, Turkey, Lebanon, and Palestine between 1859 and 1862. Because of his familiarity with the Middle East, Vignes was selected to accompany the archaeologist and early photography enthusiast, the Duc de Luynes, on a scientific excursion in 1864 from Beirut to Palmyra and areas surrounding the Dead Sea. A selection of sixty-four of Vignes’s photographs from this trip were reproduced as photogravures by Charles Nègre for the pictorial atlas of Luynes’s Voyage d’Exploration à la Mer Morte (1875). Nègre likely also printed several sets of albumen prints from Vignes’s glass negatives, including views of Palmyra, which were not published in the book. This photograph depicts part of the complex of the Temple of Bel. The remains of the temple were considered among the best preserved of the ancient city until they were largely destroyed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria in 2015.

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