Gladiator by Isidore Bonheur (1902), erected in Sainte-Anne Hospital Center in 1942
Lafayette on the Cours-la-Reine, by Paul Wayland Bartlett (1908), relocated from the Louvre in 1984; a copy was erected in 2017 at the Monument Pershing - Lafayette[fr] in Versailles
Edward VII on Place Édouard-VII[fr], by Paul Landowski (1913)
Saint Louis and Joan of Arc in front of the Basilique du Sacré-Cœur, by Hippolyte Lefèbvre (1927)
Simón Bolívar on the Cours-la-Reine, by Emmanuel Frémiet (1930), new cast of 1910 original in Bogotá, relocated to current site in 1980
La France renaissante on the Pont de Bir-Hakeim, by Holger Wederkinch[fr] (1930)
Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans in Neuilly-sur-Seine, by Carlo Marochetti (1845), initially erected near Djamaa el Djedid in Algiers and relocated in 1981[3]
Louis XIV on Place Bellecour in Lyon, by François-Frédéric Lemot (1826), replacing destroyed predecessor of 1713
Napoleon on the Prairie de la Rencontre in Laffrey, by Emmanuel Frémiet (1868), originally erected in Grenoble, warehoused in 1870 and re-erected at present site in 1929
Philis de La Charce at the jardins des Dauphins in Grenoble, by Pierre-Etienne Daniel Campagne[fr] (1900)
Napoleon and his brothers in Ajaccio, by Antoine-Louis Barye (1865), relocated to nearby site in 1969
Vincentello d'Istria[fr] in Biguglia, by Cesare Rabiti (2009)
Grand Est
Louis XIII on the façade of the Hôtel de Ville in Reims, by François Milhomme[fr] (1818), stone replacement of destroyed bronze predecessor of 1624
Louis XIV on the façade of Strasbourg Cathedral, by Jean Vallastre[fr] (1823); other equestrian statues on the Cathedral exterior by unidentified authors, including those replacing destroyed medieval predecessors representing Clovis, Dagobert, and Rudolf of Habsburg
Duke Antoine of Lorraine above the main gate of the Palais ducal of Nancy, by Giorné Viard[fr] (1851), replacing destroyed predecessor of 1512
René II, Duke of Lorraine at Place Saint-Epvre[fr], Nancy, by Mathias Schiff (1883)
Joan of Arc in Strasbourg, by Paul Dubois (1897), new cast of the Paris version first erected in front of the Palais du Rhin in 1920, relocated to present site in 1965
Joan of Arc in Gandrange, by Mathurin Moreau and Pierre Le Nordez (1921), new cast of the Montebourg version
Joan of Arc in the military cemetery of Plaine, by Xavier Obert (1924)
Joan of Arc in Bischoffsheim, by Paul Brutschi (1924)
Joan of Arc in Marlenheim, by Alois Ruscher (1948)
Joan of Arc in Vaucouleurs, by Georges Halbout (1951), initially erected near the Grande Poste in Algiers and relocated in 1966
Lafayette in Metz, by Claude Goutin[fr] (2004), replacing a recast of Bartlett's Paris statue erected in 1920 and destroyed by German occupation forces in World War II
Napoleon in Rouen, by Vital Gabriel Dubray[fr] (1865)
Joan of Arc in Montebourg, by Mathurin Moreau and Pierre Le Nordez (1899)
Bertrand du Guesclin in Caen, by Arthur Le Duc[fr] (1905)
Joan of Arc in Caen, by Joseph Ebstein[fr] (1931), initially erected in Oran and relocated in 1964
Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans at the Château d'Eu, by Carlo Marochetti (1845), second cast of the version now in Neuilly-sur-Seine, initially erected in the Cour Carrée of the Louvre in Paris, relocated to Versailles in 1848[4] and to the present location in 1971
Louis XIII on the façade of the Hôtel de Ville in Reims, by Nicolas Jacques (1624), destroyed in 1792
Louis XIII on Place Royale, now Place des Vosges in Paris, by Daniele da Volterra[8] and Pierre II Biard[fr] (1639), destroyed in 1792
Louis XIV on Place Royale, now Place de la Libération[fr] in Dijon, by Étienne Le Hongre (1690), erected in 1750 and destroyed in 1792
Louis XIV on Place Louis-le-Grand, now Place Vendôme in Paris, by François Girardon (1699), destroyed in 1792
Louis XIV on Place Bellecour in Lyon, by Martin Desjardins (late 17th century), erected in 1713 and destroyed in 1793
Louis XIV on the Promenade du Peyrou[fr] in Montpellier, by Pierre Mazeline[fr] and Simon Hurtrelle[fr] (1692), erected in 1718 and destroyed in 1792
Louis XIV on Place Royale, now Place du Parlement-de-Bretagne[fr] in Rennes, by Antoine Coysevox (1693), initially intended for Nantes, erected in 1726 and destroyed in 1793
Louis XV on Place Royale, now Place de la Bourse in Bordeaux, by Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, erected in 1743 and destroyed on 20 August 1792
Napoleon I on Place Napoléon, now Place Carnot in Lyon, by Émilien de Nieuwerkerke (1852), destroyed in 1870-71
Diego Velázquez on the Place du Louvre in Paris, by Emmanuel Frémiet (1892), relocated to the Casa de Velázquez in Madrid in the mid-1930s and destroyed during the Spanish Civil War[9]
Galignani's New Paris Guide, for 1870: Revised and Verified by Personal Inspection, and Arranged on an Entirely New Plan. Paris: A. and W. Galignani and C°. 1870. p.160.
Charlotte Stanford (July 2013), Commemorating the Dead in Late Medieval Strasbourg: The Cathedral's Book of Donors and Its Use (1320-1521), Ashgate Publishing, p.91
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