18th century Viala and
Bara were the best known child heroes of the French Revolution, though Viala was later and thus less well-known - indeed, the Jacobin press did not invoke his memory before
pluviôse an II. It was above all the speech made by
Robespierre before the Convention on 18
floréal which contributed to the spread of Viala's mythology. In that speech, Robespierre stated "By what fate or by what ingratitude has one yet hero younger and worthier of posterity been left forgotten?". At the request of
Barère, the assembly voted that Viala be honoured in the
Panthéon, though the ceremony had to be postponed from 30
messidor to 10
thermidor and was then cancelled on
Robespierre's fall on 9 Thermidor. Even so, during the month of
prairial,
Payan published a
Précis historique sur Agricol Viala which contributed to Viala's rising popularity. A civic festival was organised in Avignon on 30
messidor "in honour of Bara and Viala". An engraving of Viala's face was also distributed to all primary schools. The engraver
Pierre-Michel Alix (1762–1817) produced a head-and-shoulders portrait of Viala.
Louis Emmanuel Jadin (1768–1853) wrote the one-act play
Agricol Viala, ou Le jeune héros de la Durance (
Agricol Viala, or The young hero of the Durance), put on in Paris on 1 July 1794. 1794 also saw the composition of the marching song the
Chant du départ, whose fourth stanza is placed in a child's mouth and mentions both Bara and Viala. The 1795-launched ship
Viala was named after him.
19th and 20th centuries . In 1822, the sculptor Antoine Allier created a life-size bronze monument to Viala, showing him nude and from behind, with his right hand placed on a hatchet and his left arm gripping a pole with a ring and a length of rope. After being given by the
Louvre to the town museum, it was set up on place Gustave-Charpentier, in the suburb of
Boulogne-sur-Mer, in June 1993. Under the
French Third Republic, histography and scholarly literature contributed to renewed interest in the figures of Viala and Bara. Viala is also one of the 660 figures whose names are engraved on the
Arc de Triomphe (he appears on the 18th column as
VIALA) and the rue Viala, in the
15e arrondissement of Paris, bears his name. ==Controversies==