Style Napoleon III / Ref.0729
Cast iron Oeil-de-boeuf window
Dimensions
Width 43'' ¼ 110cm
Height 49'' ¼ 125cm
Depth: 5'' ½ 14cm
Origin:
19th century from Paris.
Status:
Little accident can be seen on the photo.
Cast iron oeil-de-boeuf, with a pure simple design, a palm leaf feature in the centre with curled sides. Napoléon III style, typically found in the architectural construction of the Baron Haussmann period.
Oeil-de-boeuf windows, also called bull's-eye windows, are a small circular or oval window. In French, oeil-de-boeuf means eye of the steer, and, in the French Renaissance Versailles Palace, erected for Louis XIV between 1661 and 1708, there is a small antechamber called the oeil-de-boeuf room, which is lighted by such a small, round window. This type of window is also frequently featured in the Jacobean manor houses of the 17th-century in England. They are very typical of Parisian architecture.
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