
Start the Week Thinking about war
11 snips
Feb 23, 2026 Rebecca Newell, Head of Art at the Imperial War Museum, on wartime London art; Jane Rogoyska, historian and author of Hotel Exile, on the Hôtel Lutetia and refugees in wartime Paris; Sir Lawrence Freedman, Emeritus Professor of War Studies, on strategy and its limits. They discuss how artists recorded war, exile and resilience in Paris, and the nature of strategic thinking and implementation.
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Lutetia As Refuge For German Intellectuals
- The Hôtel Lutetia functioned as a transient stage for exiles, serving as a neutral meeting place for displaced German intellectuals in 1930s Paris.
- Jane Rogoyska recounts Heinrich Mann and others using Lutetia salons to form a popular-front alternative while most refugees lived in impoverished hôtels garnis.
Staff Hid Wines When Germans Took Over
- When the Abwehr requisitioned the Lutetia, staff served German occupiers while secretly protecting hotel assets like its wine cellar.
- Rogoyska cites Marcel Weber hiding prized vintages behind a fake wall to keep them from German officers.
Lutetia Recast As Recovery Centre For Deportees
- After liberation the Lutetia became a reception centre for deportees returning from concentration camps and functioned like a hospital and recovery space.
- Rogoyska describes volunteers, former resistance members and scouts caring for malnourished returnees in the hotel.


