Well, it’s not actually a real cobra, but a very convincing engraving of one. “What the devil?” you say, as you pick up the illustration to study it more closely. The image is captioned, H.N. Zoologie. Reptiles (Supplément) par J.-Ces. Savigny. Pl. 3. Dessiné et grave en 1813. L’Aspic. Tresca sc[ulp]t. Based on your elementary French reading skills, you’re able to figure out that the plate is from a zoological publication featuring a section on reptiles written by someone named Savigny and engraved by Tresca, dating back to the time of Napoleon Bonaparte.
Indeed, the cobra plate comes from a set of the Description de l’Égypte, a monumental work documenting the natural history, antiquities and contemporary life of Egypt published in 27 volumes between the years 1809 and 1828 by a team of over 150 scientists and historians and more than 1000 illustrators and engravers, many of whom accompanied Napoleon’s military expedition to Egypt from 1798 to 1801. French zoologist Marie Jules César Savigny (1777-1851) was the compiler of the reptiles section in the Description de l’Égypte. The cobra plate, excised from one of the large atlas volumes of the set, was engraved by Sicilian artist Salvadore Tresca (1750?-1815).
Intrigued by the details in this memo, I wanted to find out more about the Villa Warden. I searched the internet for details and also contacted the staff at the Department of State’s Ralph J. Bunche Library. The helpful librarians at the Bunche Library found a memo from their agency’s legal adviser, S. Houston Lay, to E.R. Mosburg of the foreign building office, dated June 30, 1948, outlining irregularities in documents detailing the Department of State’s acquisition of the Villa Warden. Then in 1958, the Villa Warden was briefly in the news as the subject of a U.S. congressional investigation into entertainment expenses associated with the foreign service. According to a story on page 8 of the May 7, 1958 issue of the Chicago Tribune, “A state department ‘school’ on the French Riviera, one of the world’s most famous adult playgrounds, has stirred the ire of the House appropriations committee, members revealed today. The school is housed in the Villa Warden, near Nice. State department officials go down from Paris for three months of French lessons, the delicacies of a French chef, the finest of wines, and frequent feminine companionship, the committee has learned. … [I]t costs $2,512 per pupil [equivalent to nearly $20,000 in 2012] to give the foreign service officers the French lessons ….”
Unfortunately, after these news reports on the 1958 congressional investigations, the information trail on the Villa Warden seems to have gone cold. The Bunche Library staff checked with their overseas building office but were unable to determine what became of the Villa. Presumably it was sold, but does it still exist, or was it torn down? What was its exact address? And what happened to the rest of the Villa’s library collection? There apparently was a U.S. consulate at 31 Rue Maréchal Joffre in Nice (at the same address as the Palais Baréty), but I could find no confirming details that that remarkable 19th century stone building, with its unusual balcony supported by sculpted cattle heads, was ever known as the Villa Warden.
If any reader of this blog post knows more details about the Villa Warden during its time as a U.S. consulate and foreign service language school, or its existence before or after then, I would be delighted to hear about it!
L’Aspic [Cobra], excised from Description de L’Égypte, Zoologie, Reptiles (Supplément), planche 3 from Histoire naturelle atlas 1, call number: f DT46 .F815 copy 2 SCNHRB Cullman Library
A partial set of the multi-volume publication of the Description de L’Égypte, digitized by the Smithsonian Libraries, is available on the Biodiversity Heritage Library website here.
–Diane Shaw, Special Collections Cataloger, Smithsonian Libraries
4 Comments
What an intriguing story! Thanks for all the details. Makes one realize the federal agency “entertainment” happened long before the GSA…..
Hi Chad,
Feel free to email me at rushinge at si.edu if you have additional questions. I’d be happy to put you in touch with the appropriate staff member.
Best,
Erin Rushing
Outreach Librarian
Dear Chad, Thanks for your message. The online “Database of Scientific Illustrators, 1450-1950” has some brief details about Salvadore Tresca http://www.uni-stuttgart.de/hi/gnt/dsi2/index.php?table_name=dsi&function=details&where_field=id&where_value=1444
Bonjour,
Avez vous trouvé les renseignements que vous cherchez sur la villa Warden à Nice ?
Michel Massimi
Ecrivain et historien
Mail : michel.massimi@orange.fr