Château de Saint-Cloud
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The Château de Saint-Cloud was a royal château in France, built on a magnificent site overlooking the Seine at Saint-Cloud in Hauts-de-Seine, about 10 kilometres west of Paris. The Hôtel d'Aulnay on the site was expanded into a château in the 16th century by the Gondi banking family. The château was further expanded by "Monsieur", Philippe, duc d'Orléans in the 17th century, and finally enlarged by Marie-Antoinette in the 1780s. After occupation by Napoleon I and Napoleon III, the château was destroyed in 1870, during the Franco-Prussian War.
Today, only a few outbuildings and its park of 460 hectares remains, constituting the Domaine national de Saint-Cloud. The Pavillon de Breteuil in the park has been the home of the General Conference on Weights and Measures since 1875.
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[edit] 16th century: the Gondi
The Gondi were a family of Florentine bankers who arrived in France in 1543, in the train of Catherine de Medici. During the 1570s, the Queen offered Jérôme de Gondi a dwelling at Saint-Cloud, the Hôtel d'Aulnay, which became the nucleus of the château with a right-angled wing that looked out on a terrace. The main front faced south, with a wing that terminated in a pavilion affording a handsome view over the river. Henri III installed himself in this house in order to conduct the siege of Paris during the Wars of Religion, and here he was assassinated by the monk Jacques Clément.
After the death of Jérôme de Gondi in 1604, the château was sold in 1618 by his son Jean-Baptiste II de Gondi to Jean de Bueil, comte de Sancerre, who died shortly afterwards. The château was bought back by Jean-François de Gondi, archbishop of Paris. His embellishment notably included gardens by Thomas Francine.
After the death of Jean-François de Gondi in 1654, the château was inherited in turn by Philippe-Emmanuel de Gondi and then his nephew Henri de Gondi, duc de Retz. The duc de Retz sold the property in 1655 to Barthélemy Hervart, a banker of German extraction who was intendant then surintendant des finances. He enlarged the park to twelve hectares and did considerable rebuilding. He built a grand cascade (not the present one) in the park.
Garden details that seem to be of this phase of Saint-Cloud were drawn by Israel Silvestre[1] It was built à l'italienne, with an invisibly flat roof and frescoed facades. Its gardens descended in a series of terraces to the Seine, provided with fountains.
[edit] 17th century: "Monsieur", Philippe, duc d'Orléans
On 8 October 1658, Hevart organized a sumptuous fête at Saint-Cloud in honour of the young Louis XIV, his brother, "Monsieur", Philippe, duc d'Orléans, their mother Anne of Austria and Cardinal Mazarin. Two weeks later, 25 October, Monsieur bought the château and its grounds, for 240,000 livres. It appears that Mazarin pressed the sale, contributing to a policy of building a network of royal châteaux to the west of Paris, and relieving the eccessively-enriched Hervart from the fate of Nicolas Fouquet, whose fête at Vaux-le-Vicomte precipitated his fall and imprisonment.
Monsieur was engaged in building operations at Saint-Cloud until his death in 1701. The works were designed and constructed by his architect Antoine Lepautre, who built the wings in 1677. The château as it was reconstructed for Monsieur took the form of a "U" open to the east, towards the Seine, with the Gondi château, which had faced south, integrated into its left wing. To the rear, a long orangery formed a wing that prolonged the right wing of the court.[2] The entrance avenue, bordered by dependencies, some of which survive, arrived on an angle from the bridge.
Inside, the apartment of "Madame", Henrietta of England in the left wing was decorated by Jean Nocret in 1660, and the 45-metre Galerie d'Apollon, which occupied the whole of the right wing, was decorated with myths of Apollo by Pierre Mignard (finished in 1680). In October 1677, five days of magnificent fêtes in honour of Louis XIV, inaugurated the new decorations and demonstrated the splendour of Monsieur's ménage.[3] The Galerie was preceded and followed by by a salon at either end, a measure to be taken up at Versailles, where Louis found himself outdone in the matter of magnificent galleries, both by his brother and by his mistress at Clagny,[4] and set out in 1678 to build the Galerie at Versailles.
Following Lepautre's death in 1679, the work was continued by his executive assistant Jean Girard, a master mason rather than a full-fledged architect, and perhaps by Thomas Gobert. Jules Hardouin-Mansart intervened towards the end of the century, designing a grand stair in the left wing in the manner of the Ambassadors' Staircase at Versailles.[5]
The gardens were replanned by André Le Nôtre, and the park took on the dimensions it retains today. The Grande Cascade, constructed in 1664-1665 by Antoine Lepautre. has survived. The basin and the lowermost canal were added by Hardouin-Mansart in 1698.
A total of 156,000 livres is estimated to have been spent over the years.
[edit] 18th century: ducs d'Orléans
Saint Cloud descended in the family of Monsieur's heirs, the ducs d'Orléans, and remained in their hands for most of the 18th century.
After protracted negotiations, the Château de Saint-Cloud was bought in 1785 by Louis XVI for Marie-Antoinette, who was convinced that the air of Saint-Cloud would be good for her children. The duc d'Orléans, Louis-Philippe, who had not visited the château since his morganatic marriage with Madame de Montesson, was induced to part with it for six million.
Marie-Antoinette set to transforming Saint-Cloud in 1787-1788 by her preferred architect Richard Mique, who enlarged the corps de logis and the adjacent half of the right wing; he rebuilt the garden front. Hardouin-Mansart's staircase was demolished in favour of a new stone stairs giving onto the state apartments. The château was at first refurnished from the Garde Meuble with furnishing collected from other royal residences, but soon furniture was commissioned for Saint-Cloud. Gilded chairs and marquetry commodes with gilt-bronze mounts in the richest Louis XVI taste were being delivered to Saint-Cloud right to the opening days of the French Revolution. In 1790, Saint-Cloud was the setting for the famous interview between Marie Antoinette and Mirabeau.
[edit] Revolution and Empire
The château having been declared a bien national and emptied by the Revolutionary sales, it was in the orangery that the Coup d'État of 18 Brumaire (10 November 1799) unrolled, in which the Directoire was suppressed and the Consulat declared. Less than 5 years later, Napoleon Bonaparte was proclaimed as Emperor of the French at Saint-Cloud on 18 May 1804.
Napoleon made Saint-Cloud his preferred residence and transformed the Salon de Vénus to a throne room, which Saint-Cloud had naturally lacked, but neither he nor the occupents to follow did much more to Saint-Cloud than works of interior decoration. Napoleon III had the orangery demolished in 1862, and Eugenie transformed the bedroom of Madame into a salon in Louis XVI style.
It was at Saint-Cloud once again, in Monsieur's Galerie d'Apollon that Napoleon III invested himself as Emperor of the French on 1 December 1852. During the Second Empire, Napoleon III and Eugenie held court at Saint-Cloud in the spring and the autumn.
At Saint-Cloud, Napoleon III declared war on Prussia on 28 July 1870. The heights dominating Paris were occupied by the Prussians during the siege of Paris, who shelled Paris from the grounds of the château. Counter-fire from the French hit the building, and it caught fire and burned out on 13 October 1870. Fortunately, much of its contents had been removed by Empress Eugenie after war was declared. The standing roofless walls were finally razed in 1891. The pediment of the château's right wing, one of the preserved parts of the building, was bought by Ferdinand of Bulgaria and integrated in his palace Euxinograd on the Black Sea coast.
[edit] 20th century
Today, the park of 460 hectares constitutes the Domaine national de Saint-Cloud. It includes the garden à la française designed by Le Nôtre, Marie-Antoinette's flower garden (where roses for the French state are grown), a garden à l'anglaise from the 1820s(the Trocadéro garden), 10 fountains, and a viewpoint of Paris known as "la lanterne", because a lantern was lit there when the Emperor was in residence. Many thousands of trees in the park were knocked down or badly damaged in a storm on 26 December 1999, but restoration work continues.
The Pavillon de Breteuil, a garden pavilion of Saint-Cloud, still stands. It has been the home of the General Conference on Weights and Measures since 1875.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Two views of the Grotte, a centrally-planned domed tempietto surrounded by rills of flowing water strictly contained within the stone curbs; a view of the Grand Jet d'eau, all engraved by Adam Pérelle.
- ^ It was frescoed by Jean Rousseau.
- ^ "Thus it preceded the undertaking of the Grande Galerie at Versailles, instead of following it as writers on Saint-Cloud have supposed." (Kimball 1943, 20n.
- ^ Kimball 1943 p40.
- ^ It was eliminated in the late eighteenth century.
[edit] References
- Fiske Kimball, Creation of the Rococo, (Philadelphia Museum of Art) 1943.
- Official site of the Domaine National de Saint-Cloud
- History of Saint-Cloud (French)
- Saint-Cloud in the time of Napoléon III (French)