Located in a courtyard off the Grand Rue of Colmar, this monument is of French leader and writer Theophile Conrad Pfeffel.
The caption is in French, German and English. The English reads, "Théophile-Conrad Pfeffel (1736-1809), who lost his sight in 1757, devoted his life to literature and teaching : in 1773 he founded a military academy for training young Protestants unable to attend the Royal Academy, and in 1803 was made president of the Evangelical Consistory of Colmar. He left a collection of poems, fables, stories and short stories. This statue which was made by Charles Geiss in 1927 is a sandstone copy of the original work by André Friedrich (1859)."
Pfeffel was born in Colmar. At the time, his father was the mayor of Colmar and a legal consultant to the King of France. After the French Revolution, he lost control of the military academy and his fortune, though Napoleon I granted him an annual pension in 1806. He traveled in literary circles, having acquaintance with Voltaire, Vittorio Alfieri and the Swiss poet Johann Kaspar Lavater.
The statue here was unveiled in 1927.
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