Ermenonville

Ermenonville

Ermenonville
Administration
Country France
Region Picardy
Department Oise
Arrondissement Senlis
Canton Chantilly
Mayor Alain Petrement
Statistics
Elevation 92 m (302 ft) avg.
Land area1 16.5 km2 (6.4 sq mi)
Population2 913  (2008)
 - Density 55 /km2 (140 /sq mi)
INSEE/Postal code 60213/ 60950
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
2 Population without double counting: residents of multiple communes (e.g., students and military personnel) only counted once.

Ermenonville is a small village in northern France. It is designated municipally as a commune within the département of Oise.

Ermenonville is notable for its park named for Jean-Jacques Rousseau by René Louis de Girardin. His tomb was designed by the painter Hubert Robert, and sits on the Isle of Poplars in its lake.

Contents

History

In 1974 Turkish Airlines Flight 981 crashed in the Ermenonville Forest in Fontaine-Chaalis, Oise, near Ermenonville.[1]

Park

The garden at Ermenonville was one of the earliest and finest examples of the French landscape garden. The garden at Ermenonville was planned by Marquis René Louis de Girardin, the friend and final patron of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Girardin's master plan drew its inspiration from Rousseau's novels and philosophy of the nobility of Nature. Rousseau's tomb is prominently situated on the artificial island in Ermenonville's lake. It is remarked that Hubert Robert was the architect. Created with care and craft, the garden came to resemble a natural environment, almost a wilderness, appearing untouched by any human intervention. Girardin admired the work of William Shenstone at The Leasowes and made a ferme ornee (Ornate Farm) at Ermenonville. An imitation of Rousseau's island is at Dessau-Wörlitz Garden Realm, Germany.

During the early nineteenth century it was much visited and admired. The garden at Ermenonville was described by Girardin's son in 1811 in an elegant tour-book with aquatint plates that reveal Girardin's love of diverse vistas that capture painterly landscape effects. Enhancing the elegiac mood of these views were the altars and monuments, the 'Rustic Temple', and other details meant to evoke Rousseau's Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse.

Nearby is Rousseau's 'cabin' in the secluded désert of Ermenonville.

Napoleon Bonaparte visited Ermenonville, where he remarked to Girardin that it might have been better for the French peace that neither he nor Rousseau had ever been born. Girardin retold this story again and again after the fact.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Accident Details." Accident to Turkish Airlines DC-10 TC-JAV in the Ermenonville Forest on 3 March 1974 Final Report. French State Secretariat for Transport. 1. Retrieved on 13 February 2011.
  2. ^ Memoirs of Meneval, p. 22, http://books.google.com/books?id=MhQRAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover#PPA22,M1

External links