86 Amazing Photographs Showing Life in Paris During World War 1

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Charles Lansiaux (1855–1939) became a photographer at the end of the 19th century. He established his own business in 1903, describing his company purpose as “Artistic and industrial photography, city works, emergency works, interior photography with artificial light, enlargements, amateur documentary photography.”

At the beginning of the war in 1914, he started documenting daily life in Paris, far from the frontline. The resulting series of over 1000 images, titled “Aspects of Paris during the war of 1914” was not initially intended for publication but to be preserved as a testimony of what had happened. The Paris Historical library purchased the images as they were taken.

Here’s a gallery of 86 astonishing photographs capture everyday life in Paris from 1914-1919:

A shop of the Maggi Swiss dairy company looted because suspected of selling poisoned milk, rue de la Tombe-Issoire.

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