Pierre Winter

[3] In 1928 Winter and the lawyer Philippe Lamour (1903–1992), who had been expelled from the Faisceau, formed the Revolutionary Fascist party.

[1] During World War II, Winter and Marcel Martiny were appointed to the permanent committee on occupational medicine that was created in 1941.

In an article in Valois's weekly Nouveau Siècle he described them as dirty, ugly, over-crowded and quickly deteriorating, lacking light, air and hygiene.

[6] Writing in September 1926 Winter noted that Le Corbusier's use of reinforced concrete freed him from the constraints of old materials and concepts.

[7] Some commentators see Winter's language as carrying racist concerns when he quoted Le Corbusier as saying urban congestion created a "zone of odours, [a] terrible and suffocating zone comparable to a field of gypsies crammed in their caravans amidst disorder and improvisation."

In a modern urban environment, sport let man continue the activity of the outdoor life for which his body was designed.

[9] Praising Le Corbusier's modern dwellings, Winter said, "useless remains are disposed of, life leaves no traces, it does not hoard its waste products, does to wallow in dirt and disease.

[11] He contributed the chapter on the Middle Ages to Laignel-Lavastines Histoire générale de la médecine (1938).

[1] In this he said that the sacred and profane sciences, for a long time considered part of a single body of knowledge, could be reunited.