Fredericauguste Bartholdi

FB
Birth Date: Aug. 2, 1834
Birth Time: 6:30 a.m.
Birth City: Colmar, Grand Est, France
Leo
Degree : 9º24'0.56"
Sun Sign*
Gemini
Degree : 9º3'57.84"
Moon Sign
Ardra
Pada : 1
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 7º37'23.66"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
FB
Aug. 2, 1834
6:30 a.m.
Colmar, Grand Est, France
Celebrity
Leo
Degree : 9º24'0.56"
Sun Sign*
Gemini
Degree : 9º3'57.84"
Moon Sign
Ardra
Pada : 1
Nakshatra
Leo
Degree : 7º37'23.66"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to FredericAuguste B's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of FredericAuguste B's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with FredericAuguste B.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Saturday
Date Aug. 2, 1834
Time 6:30 a.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Colmar, Grand Est, France
Geo-location 48ºN4'50.81",
Timezone Europe/Paris

Residence Details

City Colmar, Grand Est, France
Timezone Europe/Paris

Time/Correction

Time (Europe/Paris) Aug. 02, 1834, 06:09:56 AM
Time (UTC) Aug. 02, 1834, 06:00:35 AM
Time (LMT) Aug. 02, 1834, 06:30:00 AM
Time (Julian) 2391127.75040509
LMT Correction 0.4903 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 21º31'54.32"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 48ºN4'50.81" Lon: 7ºN21'21.02"

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Vocation

Art | Fine art artist

Lifestyle

Work | Travel for work Financial | Fundraiser

Notable

Famous | Historic figure Book Collection | American Book

Family

Childhood | Family traumatic event Relationship | Number of Marriages

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

Italian-French sculptor who designed and built the Statue of Liberty that stands in New York harbor; he also helped to raise the funds to build the statue. Bartholdi studied architecture and painting before he went into sculpture, and was the creator of many monuments in France. The descendant of an Italian family which had settled in France, he was raised by his mom after the death of his dad when he was two. As a young man, Bartholdi was on the streets of Paris on the December day when Louis Napoleon Bonaparte's coup d'etat toppled the Second Republic. There, he witnessed a scene which marked him deeply. A group of republicans had erected a barricade. Night was falling when a young girl, bearing a torch, leaped over the barrier crying "Forward!" Bonaparte's soldiers opened fire and the girl fell dead. From then on, the unknown girl with the torch was, for him, the symbol of liberty. Bartholdi's love of the colossal was born on a trip to Egypt, during which, fascinated, he sketched voluminously the massive statues of the ancient empire. The idea for his own masterpiece was conceived in 1865 when he met Edouard de Laboulaye, a prominent French liberal and ardent admirer of the U.S. and its model democracy. Knowing that in 1876 America would be celebrating the centenary of its independence, Laboulaye was urging that France offer a spectacular tribute to mark the occasion. Bartholdi proposed a monument to liberty, and his imagination afire, offered his talents as the sculpture. He met his model at a wedding, Jeanne-Emilie Baheux de Puysieux, a beautiful brunette with the figure of a goddess. He persuaded her to pose for "Liberty Lighting the World," and later, married her. The classic features of the statue, however, resemble more closely Bartholdi's mother. In 1869, the design for the statue was completed, but his work was interrupted by military service in the Franco-Prussian War the following year. The war lost and over, he returned to his work. Bartholdi sailed for America in June 1871 to site a location. As the ship entered New York harbor in the dimness of dawn, he was inspired by the sight of Bedloe's Island jutting out into the bay. "Surely it is here that my statue should be raised," he wrote in his notes, "here where men first perceived the New World, here where liberty casts her radiance over both worlds." After traveling throughout the U.S. for more than three months to win support for his project, Bartholdi returned to Paris, eager to work but with a lack of finances. In January 1875, Laboulaye created the Franco-American Union to raise money; the work was a gift to the United States with American's needing only to provide the pedestal. Without waiting for funds, Bartholdi eagerly began work. Debating materials and supports, he sought the aid of engineer Gustav Eiffel, who was soon to create an immortal colossus of his own. Eiffel designed an iron under-structure in the form of a pylon on four feet embedded more than 26 feet into the pedestal. The statue's copper "skin" would be mounted onto this skeleton piece by piece. By mid-1875, the statue had begun to take shape. In November 1875, the Franco-American Union staged a banquet in Paris in which a scale model of the statue was displayed. From then on, French purses began to open wide, but America was slow to respond. Bartholdi traveled to the U.S. again in 1876, commissioned to attract the attention of the American public. The statue's torch-bearing arm was exhibited at the Philadelphia's Centennial Exposition and greeted with awe. The index finger alone was eight feet long and more than three feet around; a dozen people could stand in the rim of the torch. The gigantic arm caused a sensation and Americans began to realize the immensity of the gift which France offered. Previously unknown, Bartholdi became a celebrity. Congress adopted a resolution of acceptance and Bedloe's Island was agreed upon as the site. On 8/05/1884 the first block of granite was laid on Bedloe's Island and the two-year job of constructing a pedestal begun. Back home, the gigantic figure began to rise above the rooftops of Paris. The statue's 120 tons of iron and 80 tons of copper took three months to crate when it came time to load it aboard the warship Isere. Taking the sections from Paris to Rouen required a special, 70-car freight train. The most powerful crane of the period worked for 16 days loading the precious pieces. On 6/17/1885, Isere was escorted by American warships into New York harbor, acclaimed by the sirens of thousands of boats whose decks, like the piers, were crammed with cheering people. During the next six months, 75 workmen, clinging like flies to the flanks of the statue, used 300,000 rivets to secure some 100 parts of the statue to the framework. The torch, at last, was put in place in mid-October. President Grover Cleveland officiated at the unveiling on 10/28/1886. The statue's head was still swathed in a huge French flag and Bartholdi was inside the head. When the applause indicated that the dedication was made, he pulled a cord and the flag waved free. Liberty showed her majestic face. Bartholdi, an honorary citizen of New York and Commander of the Legion of Honor, died on 10/05/1904, in Paris, immortalized by the work that embodied his long-cherished vision of freedom. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1869

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1869 (Design revealed)

2

Published/Released

Nov. 1, 1875

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released November 1875 (Model exhibited at banquet) .

3

Begin Major Project

Aug. 1, 1884

Work : Begin Major Project 5 August 1884 (First of foundation strarted for statue) .

4

Great Achievement

Oct. 28, 1886

Work : Great Achievement 28 October 1886 (Pres. Cleveland unveiled Statue of Liberty) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Begin Travel

June 1, 1871

Social : Begin Travel June 1871 (To America to find site) .

2

Return Home

Sept. 1, 1871

Social : Return Home September 1871 (To Paris) .

3

Begin Travel

Jan. 1, 1876

Social : Begin Travel 1876 (To U.S.)

4

Great Publicity

June 17, 1885

Social : Great Publicity 17 June 1885 (Statue arrived in N.Y. harbor) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Unspecified

Oct. 1, 1904

Death, Cause unspecified 5 October 1904 (Age 70) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Great Insight

Jan. 1, 1865

Misc. : Great Insight 1865 (Conceived the idea for the Statue of Liberty)

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali