Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Invitation Card for the 1st Guard Zouaves Regiment in Versailles

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Charles Dominique Oscar Lahalle (artist, 1833–1909)
Tinted lithograph
Paris, France: Frick frères, 1859
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


This invitation card features a Zouave figure before a curtain unveiling a blank unfurled scroll, ready for the host to inscribe an invitation requesting the presence of the recipient at dinner. Such graphic invitation cards gained popularity among polite society during the middle of the nineteenth century. Often tailored to fit the themes chosen by the host, this one may have been intended for a dinner for the first Zouave regiment stationed at Versailles. North African and colonial scenes populate the border. The top margin depicts a simple soldier’s fare consumed on duty. On the left, soldiers hike single file down a mountain path toward a lavish feast (“diffa,” from Moroccan Arabic ضِيفَة: ḍīfa) served and labeled at the bottom of the page. By highlighting the collective meals and journeys undertaken by Zouaves, the card calls them to a more formal gathering to commemorate their military service. Its imagery further preserves how their shared memories tied these men together just as closely as their distinctive uniforms.