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In addition, etiquette ordained the order of prominence at court, limited or extended access based on rank or favor, rigidly maintained complex customs of address, and even who could sit or stand under what circumstances in the royal presence or that of the great nobles.
In addition, etiquette ordained the order of prominence at court, limited or extended access based on rank or favor, rigidly maintained complex customs of address, and even who could sit or stand under what circumstances in the royal presence or that of the great nobles.


==The Gardens==
==[[The Gardens of Versailles]]==

[[Image:Versailles Plan Jean Delagrive.jpg|center|thumb|800px|Plan of the chateau of Versailles and the gardens dating from 1746, by the Abbé Delagrive, geographer of the city of Paris.]]

Complementing and evolving with the chateau are the gardens of Versailles. During the Ancien Régime, the domain of Versailles was arranged as the Grand Parc – the vast forested area that surrounded that chateau and the village of Versailles – and the Petit Parc – the walled area that was developed for the formal gardens of the chateau. Our discussion will focus on the Petit Parc and the evolutions of the gardens contained therein.

===Introduction===

This discussion will address the history and evolution of the gardens starting with [[Louis XIII]] and ending with the present day. The historical discussion is followed by information on the bosquets, replantations, and water supply problems.

====Louis XIII====

With Louis XIII’s final purchase of lands from the Gondi family and his assumption of the seigneurial role of Versailles in the 1630s, formal gardens were laid out west of the chateau. Records indicate that late in the decade Mollet & Masson designed the gardens, which probably remained intact until the expansion ordered under Louis XIV in the 1660s. This early layout, which has survived in the so-called Du Bus plan of c.1662, established the structure on which the gardens of Louis XIV were based, especially the clear definition of the main east-west and north-south axes that anchors the garden’s layout.

In 1661, after the disgrace of the finance minister, [[Nicolas Fouquet]], who embezzled crown funds to build his home at [[Vaux-le-Vicomte]], Louis XIV turned his attentions to Versailles. With the aid of Fouquet’s architect – [[Louis LeVau]] – painter – [[Charles LeBrun]] – and landscape architect – [[André LeNôtre]], Louis began an embellishment and expansion program at Versailles that would occupy his time and worries for the remainder of his reign.

From this point forward, the expansion of the gardens of Versailles followed the expansions of the chateau. Accordingly, the building campaigns of Louis XIV apply to the gardens as well.

====Louis XIV: 1st building campaign====

1662 witnessed minor modification to the chateau; however, greater attention was given to developing the gardens. Existing bosquets and parterres were expanded and new ones created. Most significant among the creations at this time were the Orangerie and the Grotte de Téthys.

The Orangerie, which was designed by Louis LeVau, was located south of the chateau, a situation that took advantage of the natural slope of the hill. The Orangerie provided a protected area in which orange trees were kept during the winter months.

The Grotte de Téthys, which was located to the north of the chateau, formed part of the iconography of the chateau and of the gardens that aligned Louis XIV with solar imagery. The grotto would be completed during the 2nd building campaign.

By 1664, the gardens had evolved to the point that Louis XIV inaugurated the gardens with the fête galante called [[Les Plaisirs de l’Île Enchantée]]. The event, which officially was to celebrate his mother, [[Anne d’Autriche]], and his wife, [[Marie-Thérèse]] but in reality celebrated [[Louise de La Vallière]], Louis’ mistress, was held in May of that year. Guests were regaled with fabulous entertainments in the gardens over a period of one week. As a result of this fête – particularly the lack of housing for guests (most of the guest at the fête had to sleep in their carriages), Louis realized the shortcomings of Versailles and began to expand the chateau and the gardens once again.

==== Louis XIV: 2nd building campaign====

Between 1664 and 1668, a furry of activity was evidenced in the gardens – especially with regard to fountains and new bosquets; it was during this time that the imagery of the gardens consciously exploited Apollo and solar imagery as metaphors for Louis XIV. Louis LeVau’s ''enveloppe'' of the Louis XIII’s chateau provided a means by which, though the decoration of the garden facade, imagery in the decors of the grands appartements of the king and queen formed a symbiosis with the imagery of the gardens.

With this new phase of construction, the gardens assumed the topographical and iconological design vocabulary that would remain in force until the 18th century. As [[André Félibien]] noted in his description of Versailles, solar and apollonian themes predominated with projects constructed at this time.<ref>“Since the sun was the emblem of Louis XIV and poets use the sun and Apollo, everything at Versailles was related to that Greek god.” Félibien, André. ''Description sommaire du chasteau de Versailles''. (Paris, 1674)</ref>

Three additions formed the topological and symbolic nexus of the gardens, the completion of the Grotte de Téthys, the Bassin de Latone, and the Bassin d’Apollon.

===== Grotte de Téthys=====

Started in 1664 and finished in 1670 with the installation of the statuary by the Marsy brothers, the grotto formed an important symbolic and technical component to the gardens.

Symbolically, the Grotte de Téthys related to the myth of Apollo, as according to the Greeks, this is where Apollo rested after driving his chariot to light the sky. The grotto was a free-standing structure located just north of the chateau. The interior, which was decorated with shell-work to represent a sea cave, contained the statue group by the [[Marsy]] brothers depicting the sun god attended by nereids (central grouping) and his horses being groomed by attendants of Thetis (the two accompanying statue groups). Originally, these statues were set in three individual niches in the grotto and were surrounded by various fountains and water features.

Technically, the Grotte de Téthys played a critical role in the hydraulic system that supplied water to the garden. The roof of the grotto supported a reservoir that stored water pumped from the Clagny pond and which fed the fountains lower in the garden via gravity.

=====Bassin de Latone=====

Located on the east-west axis just west and below the Parterre d’Eau, is the Bassin de Latone. Designed by André LeNôtre and constructed between 1668-1670, the fountain depicted an episode from Ovid’s ''Metamorphoses''. [[Latona]] and her children, [[Apollo]] and [[Diana]], being tormented with mud slung by Lycian peasants, who refused to let her and her children drink from their pond, appealed to Zeus who responded by turning the Lycians into frogs. This episode from mythology was chosen as an allegory to the revolts of the [[Fronde]], which occurred during the minority of Louis XIV.<ref>The link between Ovid’s story and French history is emphasized by the reference to “mud slinging” in a political context. The revolts of the Fronde – the word fronde also means slingshot – have been regarded as the origin of the use of the term “mud slinging” in a political context.</ref>

=====Bassin d’Apollon=====

Further along the east-west axis is the Bassin d’Apollon – the Apollo Fountain. Occupying the site of Rondeau/Bassin des Cygnes of Louis XIIII, the Apollo Fountain, which was constructed 1668-1671, depicts the sun god driving his chariot to light the sky. The fountain forms a focal point in the garden and serves as a transitional element between the gardens of the Petit Parc and the Grand Canal.[[Image:Bassin Apollon.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Bassin d’Apollon -- Apollo Fountain]]

=====Grand Canal=====

With a length of 1,500 meters and a width of 62 meters, the Grand Canal, which was built between 1668-1671, physically and visually prolongs the east-west axis to the walls of the Grand Parc. During the Ancien Régime, the Grand Canal served as a venue for boating parties. In 1674, as a result of a series of diplomatic arrangements that benefited Louis XIV, the king ordered the construction of Petite Venise – Little Venice. Located at the junction of the Grand Canal and the junction of the northern transversal branch, Little Venice housed the caravels and yachts that were received from The Netherlands and the gondolas and gondoliers received as gifts from the [[Doge of Venice]], hence the name.

Above the beyond the decorative and festive aspects of this garden feature, the Grand Canal also served a practical role. Situated at a low point in the gardens, the Grand Canal collected water as it drained from the fountains in the garden above. Water from the Grand Canal was pumped back to the reservoir on the roof of the Grotte de Téthys via a network of windmill-powered and horse-powered pumps.

=====Parterre d’Eau=====

Situated above the [[Latona]] Fountain is the terrace of the chateau, known as the Parterre d’Eau. Forming a transitional element from the chateau to the gardens below and placed on the north-south axis of the gardens, the Parterre d’Eau provided a venue in which the imagery and symbolism of the decors of the grands appartements synthesized with the iconography of the gardens.<ref>For the relation of the imagery of the garden and the decor of the grands appartements, see Edward Lighthart, “Archétype et symbole dans le style Louis XIV versaillais: réflexions sur ''l’imago rex'' et ''l’imago patriae'' au début de l’époque moderne,” (Doctoral thesis, 1997).</ref>

In 1664, [[Louis XIV]] commissioned a series of statues intended to decorate the water feature of the Parterre d’Eau. The Grande Commande, as the commission is known, comprised 24 statues of the classic quaternities and 4 additional statues depicting abductions from the classic past. Designed by [[Charles LeBrun]] and executed by the foremost sculptors of the day, the Grande Commande consisted of:

• The Four Elements: Earth, Air, Water, Fire

• The Four Seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter

• The Four Parts of the World: Europe, Africa, Asia, America

• The Four Humors of Man: Melancholic, Choleric, Phlegmatic, Sanguine

• The Four Forms of Poetry: Epic, Pastoral, Lyric, Satirical

• The Four Parts of the Day: Daybreak, Noon, Evening, Night

• The Four Abductions:
* [[Persephone]] by [[Pluto]]<ref>Only the Abduction of Persephone by Pluto (sculpted by François Girardon) was completed.</ref>
* [[Cybele]] by [[Saturn]]
* [[Orethyia]] by [[Boreas]]
* [[Crosis]] by [[Neptune]]

=====Perfection of the Bosquets=====

One of the distinguishing features of the gardens during the 2nd building campaign was the proliferation of bosquets. Expanding the layout established during the 1st building campaign, LeNôtre added or expanded on no fewer that ten bosquets. The chronology is as follows:

1670
* Bosquet du Marais

1671
* Bosquet du Théâtre d’Eau
* Île du Roi & Miroir d’Eau
* Salle des Festins or Salle du Conseil
* Bosquet des Trois Fontaines

1672
* Labyrinthe
* Bosquet de l’Arc de Triomphe

1675
* Bosquet de Renommée
* Bosquet de l’Encélade

1678
* Bosquet des Sources

In addition to the expansion of existing bosquets and the construction of new ones, there were two additional projects that defined this era, the Bassin des Sapins and the Pièce d’Eau des Suisses.

=====Bassin des Sapins; Pièce d’Eau des Suisses=====

In 1676, the Bassin des Sapins, which was located north of the chateau below the Parterre du Nord and the Allée des Marmousets<ref>Also known as the Allée d’Eau, this incline forms a transitional element between the Parterre du Nord and the Bassin de Neptune. In 1688, the bronze sculptures depicting children were installed as fountains. The statues – groups of three children – supported basins into which a single jet of water issued. Originally, the basins contained gilded lead fruit which were highly prized souvenirs during the reign of the Sun King.</ref> was designed to form a topological pendant along the north-south axis with the Pièce d’Eau des Suisses located at the base of the Satory hill south of the chateau. Later modifications in the garden would transform this fountain into the Bassin de Neptune.

Excavated in 1678, the Pièce d’Eau des Suisses – named for the Swiss Guard who constructed the lake – occupied an area of marshes and ponds, some of which had been used to supply water for the fountains in the garden. This water feature, with a surface area of more than 15 hectares, is the second largest – after the Grand Canal – at Versailles.

==== Louis XIV: 3rd building campaign====

[[Image:Chateau-de-versailles-Rotonde.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Bassin de Latone -- Latona Fountain with the ''tapis vert'' and the Grand Canal in the background]]No sooner had the dust settled from the building and expansion of the chateau and gardens from the 2nd building campaign than Louis XIV ordered further expansion of both. While the 2nd building campaign can be characterized by a proliferation of new bosquets, the 3rd building campaign was distinguished by a stylistic change from the natural esthetic of André LeNôtre to the architectonic style of [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]].

The topological changes that occurred at this time were:

1680
* Tapis Vert – This expanse of lawn that stretched between the Latona Fountain and the Apollo Fountain achieved its final size and definition at this time under the direct of André LeNôtre.

1684
[[Image:Versailles-Chateau-Jardins.jpg|250px|thumb|left|Chateau of Versailles; view of the ''Parterre d'Eau'' with the statue of La Seine in the foreground]]
* The Parterre d’Eau – Under the direction of [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]], the Parterre d’Eau was remodeled. The statues of the Grande Commande were relocated to other parts of the garden. Two twin octagonal basins were constructed and decorated with bronze statues representing the rivers of France.[[Image:Orangerie.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The ''Orangerie'' in the gardens of the Palace of Versailles with the ''Pièce d’Eau des Suisses'' in the background]]

* Orangerie – South of the Parterre d’Eau, the Orangerie of [[Louis LeVau]] was destroyed to accommodate a lager structure, designed by Hardouin-Mansart. In addition to the Orangerie, the Escalier des Cent Marches, which facilitated access to the gardens from the south and the Pièce d’Eau des Suisses, and the Parterre du Midi were also constructed at this time, giving the gardens just south of the chateau their present configuration and decoration.

* In this year, the Grotte de Téthys was destroyed in anticipation of the construction of the Aile des Nobles – the north wing of the chateau.[[Image:Midi.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Parterre du Midi and the Aile des Princes, chateau of Versailles with the Pièce d’Eau des Suisses in the background]]

1685-86
* The north wing of the chateau was constructed and the Parterre du Nord was remodeled to respond to the new architecture of this part of the chateau. To compensate for the loss of the reservoir on top of the Grotte de Téthys and to meet the increased demand for water, [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]] designed new and larger reservoirs situated due north of the Aile des Nobles.

1686-87
* The Bassin de Latone, under the direction of [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]], was remodeled. It is his work that we see today at Versailles.

=====Bosquets of the 3rd building campaign=====

During the 3rd building campaign, three bosquets of import were designed or modified.

1680
* The Galerie des Antiques was designed on the site of the earlier and short-lived Galerie d’Eau (1678). This bosquet was conceived as an open-air gallery in which antique statues and copies acquired by the Académie de Rome were displayed.

1681-83
* The Salle de Bal was a secluded bosquet in which a cascade – the only one surviving at Versailles – formed the backdrop for this bosquet that was use for dancing.

1684-85
* The Colonnade of [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]] was built on the site of LeNôtre’s Bosquet des Sources. This circular peristyle formed from 32 arches with 28 fountains was the most architectural expression of Hardouin-Mansart in the gardens of Versailles.

==== Louis XIV: 4th building campaign====

Shortly after the [[Treaty of Rijswijk]] had been promulgated in 1697 ending the [[War of the League of Augsburg]], than Louis XIV and France were embroiled in yet another war. The [[War of the Spanish Succession]] effectively removed Louis XIV’s attention from Versailles; it would not be until 1704 that any significant modifications in the gardens would be made. Between 1704 and 1709, bosquets were modified – some quite drastically with new names suggesting the new austerity that characterized the latter years of Louis XIV’s reign.

On 1 September 1715, Louis XIV died at Versailles and was succeeded by his 5-year old great-grandson [[Louis XV]]. Once the Sun King’s body had been removed for burial at St. Denis, Louis XV, under the care of the Regent, [[Philippe II d’Orléans]], and the court withdrew to [[Vincennes]] and the chateau of Versailles entered an era of uncertainty.

====Louis XV====

In 1722, [[Louis XV]] and the court returned to Versailles. Seeming to heed his great-grandfather’s admonition not to engage in costly building campaigns, Louis XV did not undertake the building campaigns at Versailles that [[Louis XIV]] had. The only significant construction in the chateau consisted of the Salon d’Hercule (1736), l’Opéra, as well as the redecoration of the Petits Appartements du Roi. The gardens’ only noteworthy addition was the completion of the Bassin de Neptune with the addition of statues (1738-1741).

Rather than expend resources on modifying the gardens at Versailles, Louis XV – an avid botanist – directed his efforts at Trianon. In the area now occupied by the Hameau de la reine, Louis XV constructed and maintained ''les jardins botaniques'' – the botanical gardens. In 1750, the year in which les jardins botaniques were constructed, the ''Jardinier-Fleruist'', [[Claude Richard]] (1705-1784), assumed administration of the botanical gardens.

In 1761, [[Louis XV]] commissioned [[Jacques-Anges Gabriel]] to build the Petit Trianon as a residence that would allow him to spend more time near the jardins botaniques. It was at the Petit Trianon that [[Louis XV]] fell ill with smallpox. On 10 May 1774, [[Louis XV]] died at Versailles and the chateau and the gardens entered a new era of change.

====Louis XVI====

Upon [[Louis XVI]]’s ascension to the throne, the gardens of the Versailles underwent a transformation that recalled the 4th building campaign of [[Louis XIV]]. Engendered by a change in outlook as advocated by [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] and the [[Philosophes]], the winter of 1774-1775 witnessed a complete replanting of the gardens. Trees and shrubbery dating from the reign of [[Louis XIV]] were felled or uprooted with the intent of transforming the ''jardins français'' of [[LeNôtre]] and [[Hardouin-Mansart]] into an English-style garden.

The attempt to convert [[LeNôtre]]’s masterpiece into an English-style garden failed to achieve its desired goal. Owing largely to the topology of the land, the English esthetic was abandoned and the gardens replanted in the French style. However, with an eye on economy, [[Louis XVI]] ordered the palissades – the labor-intensive clipped hedging that formed walls in the bosquets – to be replaced with rows of lime trees or chestnut trees. Additionally, a number of the bosquets dating from the time of the Sun King were extensively modified or destroyed. The most significant contribution to the gardens during the reign of [[Louis XVI]] was the Grotte des Baines d’Apollon. The rockwork grotto set in an English style bosquet was the masterpiece of [[Hubert Robert]] in which the statues from the Grotte de Téthys were placed.

With the departure of the royal family from Versailles on 6 October 1789, the fate of the chateau and the gardens was far from certain.

====Revolution====

In 1792, under order from the [[National Convention]], some of the trees in gardens were felled, while parts of the Grand Parc were parceled and dispersed. Sensing the potential threat to Versailles, [[Louis Claude Marie Richard]] (1754-1821) – director of the ''jardins botaniques'' and grandson of [[Claude Richard]] – lobbied the government to save Versailles. He succeeded in preventing further dispersing of the Grand Parc and threats to destroy the Petit Parc were abolished by suggesting that the parterres could be used to plant vegetable gardens and that orchards could occupy the open areas of the garden. Fortunately, these plans were never put into action; however, the gardens were opened to the public – it was not uncommon to see people washing their laundry in the fountains and spreading it on the shrubbery to dry.

====Napoléon I====

The Napoleonic era by and large ignored Versailles. In the chateau, a suite of rooms was arranged for the use of the empress Marie-Louise; but the gardens were left unchanged, save for the disastrous felling trees in the Bosquet de l’Arc de Triomphe and the Bosquet des Trois Fontines. Massive soil erosion necessitated planting of new trees.

====Restoration====

[[Image:Raimundo Madrazo - Versailles, le jardin du Roi.jpg|right|thumb|220px|''Versailles, le jardin du Roi'' by Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta, 1914-1920, oil on canvas, 17 x 30 cm, [[Musée Lambinet]]]]
With the restoration of the [[Bourbons]] in 1814, the gardens of Versailles witnessed the first modifications since the Revolution. In 1817, [[Louis XVIII]] ordered the conversion of the Île du roi and the Miroir d’Eau into an English-styled garden – the Jardin du roi.

====The July Monarchy; The Second Empire====

While much of the chateau’s interior was irreparably altered to accommodate the [[Museum to all the Glories of France]] (inaugurated by [[Louis-Philippe]], 10 May 1837), the gardens, by contrast, remained untouched. With the exception of the state visit of [[Queen Victoria]] and [[Prince Albert]] in 1855, at which time the gardens were setting for a gala fete that recalled the fetes of [[Louis XIV]], [[Napoléon III]] ignored the chateau, preferring instead the [[chateau of Compiègne.]]

====Pierre de Nolhac====
With the arrival of [[Pierre de Nolhac]] as director of the museum, a new era of historical research began at Versailles. Nolhac, an ardent archivist and scholar, began to piece together the history of Versailles, and subsequently established the criteria for restoration of the chateau and preservation of the gardens, which are on-going to this day.

===Bosquets and the Case of the ‘Apollo Perigrinator’===

The study of the bosquets of Versailles is challenging owing to the many modifications made to the gardens between the 17th and the 19th centuries. The Case of the ‘Apollo Perigrinator’ demonstrated how radically some of the bosquets were altered.<ref>Excerpt from a lecture presented to the Cercle de Francophonie de Xi’an by Edward Lighthart, November 2005, Xi’an, Shaanxi, China</ref>

====Case of the ‘Apollo Perigrinator’====

[[Image:Bainsapollon1.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Grotte des bains d’Apollon, central statue grouping originally from the Grotte de Téthys]]In 1664, on the north side of the chateau, the Grotte de Téthys was constructed as a technical and symbolic component to the garden. Technically, the grotto with its reservoir supplied part of the water used by the fountains in the gardens; symbolically, the grotto, linked the Apollo myth with Louis XIV. The focal point of the grotto was the statue grouping Apollo and his horses by the Marsy brothers, which was installed in 1672. When the grotto was destroyed in 1684 to make room for the Aile des Nobles, the statues were relocated to the Bosquet de la Renommée.

Build in 1675, Bosquet de la Renommée featured a fountain statue of Fame – hence the name of the bosquet. With the relocation of the statues from the grotto in 1684, the bosquet was remodeled to accommodate the statues and the Fame fountain was removed. At this time the bosquet was rechristened Bosquet des Bains d’Apollon.[[Image:Bosquet des bains d appolon du chateau de versailles.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Grotte des Bains d’Apollon featuring the Apollo group from the Grotte de Téthys by Gaspard and [[Balthazar Marsy]]]]

As part of the reorganization of the garden that was ordered by Louis XIV in the early part of the 18th century, the Apollo grouping was moved once again. The Bosquet du Marais, located near the Latona Fountain, was destroyed and was replaced by the new Bosquet des Bains d’Apollon. The statues were installed on marble plinths from which water issued; and each statue grouping was protected by an intricately carved and gilded baldachin. The old Bosquet des Bains d’Apollon was renamed Bosquet des Dômes due to two domed pavilions build in the bosquet.

During the reign of Louis XVI, the Bosquet des Bains d’Apollon was replaced by the Grotte des Bains d’Apollon. Hubert Robert designed an artificial grotto in which the Marsy statues were placed among pools and cascading water. The bosquet was further embellished with verdant English-styled landscaping. It is with Robert’s masterpiece that the ‘Apollo Perigrinator’ has come to rest and which one sees today at Versailles.

<br /><br /><br /><br />

====Deux Bosquets====
1663
*Located north and south of the east-west axis, these two bosquets were originally laid out as a series of paths around four ''salles de verdure'' and which converged on a central salle that contained a fountain.

1682
*The southern bosquet becomes the Bosquet de la Girandole, thus named due to the spoke-like arrangement of the central fountain.

1696
*The northern bosquet becomes the Bosquet du Dauphin due to the central dolphin fountain.

1775
*The two bosquets were destroyed and replanted with lime trees. At this time, they were rechristened the Quinconce du Nord and the Quinconce du Midi.

====Labyrinthe====

1665
* In this year, [[André LeNôtre]] laid out a maze of unadorned paths south of the Latona Fountain near the Orangerie

1672-1677
*[[Charles Perrault]] – author of the Mother Goose stories – advised [[Louis XIV]] to remodel the Labyrinth in a way to serve the Dauphin’s education. Accordingly, the new Labyrinthe featured 39 fountains depicting stories from [[Aesop’s Fables]]. The fountains were accompanied by a plaque on which the fable was printed; from these plaques, Louis XIV’s son learned to read. Once completed in 1677 the Labyrinthe contained 39 fountains with 333 painted metal animal sculptures.

1778
* Citing repair and maintenance costs, Louis XVI ordered the Labyrinthe to be destroyed. In its place an arboretum of exotic trees was planted as an English-styled garden. Rechristened Bosquet de la Reine, it would be in this part of the garden that an episode of the [[Affair of the Diamond Necklace]], which compromised [[Marie-Antoinette]], transpired in 1785.

====Bosquet de l’Etoile====

1666
* Originally designed by André LeNôtre as a ''salle de verdure'', the bosquet contained a path encircling a central pentagonal area.

1671
* A more elaborate path system was developed to enhance the central water feature, which necessitated a name change to the Bosquet de la Montagne d’Eau.

1704
* The Bosquet de la Montagne d’Eau was remodeled and rechristened Bosquet de l’Etoile.

====Bosquet du Marais====

1670
* Originally, the bosquet contained a central rectangular pool surrounded by a turf border. Edging the pool were metal reeds that concealed numerous jets for water; a swan that had water jetting from its beak occupied each corner. The center of the pool featured an iron tree with painted tin leaves that sprouted water from its branches. Because of this tree, the bosquet was also known as the Bosquet du Chêne Vert.

1705
* The fountain was destroyed and the bosquet remodeled as the Bosquet des Bains d’Apollon.

1774
* [[Hubert Robert]] remodeled the bosquet, which was renamed the Grotte des Bains d’Apollon.

====Île du roi; Miroir d’Eau====

1671
* Originally designed as two separate water features, the larger – Île du roi – contained an island that formed the focal point of a system of elaborate fountains. The Île du roi was separated from the Miroir d’Eau by a causeway that featured 24 water jets.

1684
* The island was removed and the total number of water jets in this bosquet was significantly reduced.

1704
* The causeway was remodeled and most of the water jets were removed.

1817
* Both the Île du roi and the Miroir d’Eau were completely remodeled as an English-style garden. At this time the bosquet was rechristened Jardin du roi.

====Salle des Festins (Salle du Conseil) – Bosquet de l’Obélisque====

1671
* [[LeNôtre]] conceived a quatrefoil island surrounded by a channel that contained 50 water jets. Each lobe of the island contained simple fountain; and access was obtained by two swing bridges. Beyond the channel and placed at the cardinal points were four additional fountains.

1706
* Under the direction of [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]], the bosquet was completely remodeled. The central island was replaced by a large basin raised on five steps, which was surrounded by a canal. The central fountain contained 230 jets that, when in play, formed an obelisk – hence the new name Bosquet de l’Obélisque.

====Bosquet du Théâtre d’Eau====

1671-1674
* The central feature of this bosquet was an auditorium/theater sided by three tiers of turf seating that faced a stage decorated with four fountains alternating with 3 radiating cascades.

1680-1715
* During these years there was much rearranging of the statues that decorated the bosquet. In 1709, the bosquet was rearranged with the addition of the Fontaine de l’Île aux Enfants.

1774-1775
* As part of the replantation of the gardens ordered by Louis XVI, the Bosquet du Théâtre d’Eau was destroyed and replaced with the unadorned Bosquet du Rond-Vert.

====Bosquet des Trois Fontines (Berceau d’Eau)====

1677-1678
* Situated to the west of the Allée des Marmousets and replacing the short-lived Berceau d’Eau (1671; a long and narrow bosquet that featured a water arbor made by numerous jets of water), the enlarged bosquet was transformed by LeNôtre into a series of three linked rooms. Each room contained a number of fountains that played with special effects. The fountains survived the modifications that Louis XIV ordered for other fountains in the gardens in the early 18th century and were subsequently spared during the 1774-1775 replantation of the gardens. In 1830 the bosquet was replanted at which time the fountains were suppressed.

2004
* Due to storm damage in the park in 1990 and then again in 1999, the Bosquet des Trois Fontaines was restored and reinaugurated on 12 June 2004.

====Bosquet de l’Arc de Triomphe====

1672
* Originally, this bosquet was conceived as a simple ''pavillon d’eau'' – a round open expanse with a square fountain in the center.

1676
* The bosquet, located to the east of the Allée des Marmousets and forming the pendant to the Bosquet des Trois Fontaines, was enlarged an redecorated along political lines that alluded to French military victories over Spain and Austria, at which time the triumphal arch was added – hence the name. As with the Bosquet des Trois Fontaines, this bosquet survived the modifications of the 18th century, but was replanted in 1830 at which time the fountains were removed. This bosquet is in the process of being restored.

====Bosquet de l’Encélade====

1675
* Evolving at the same time as the Bosquet de la Renommée (see: Case of the ‘Apollo Perigrinator’ above), this fountians depicts [[Encelades]], a fallen [[Titan]] who was condemned to live below Mt. Etna, being cosummed by volcanic lava. In 1678, an octagonal ring of turf and eight rocaille fountains surrounding the central fountain were added. These additions were removed in 1708.

* This fountain, which has the highest water jet in the gardens (25m), was designed as an allegory of Louis XIV’s victory over the [[Fronde]].

====Bosquet des Sources; La Colonnade====

1678
* Designed as a simple unadorned ''salle de verdure'', LeNôtre enhanced and incorporated an existing stream to create a bosquet that featured rivulets that twisted among nine islets.
[[Image:colonnade1.jpg|thumb|250px|right|La Colonnade with the "Abduction of Persephone" by [[François Girardon]]]]

1684
* In this year, [[Jules Hardouin-Mansart]] completely redesigned the bosquet by constructing a circular arched double peristyle. The Colonnade, as it was renamed, originally featured 32 arches and 31 fountains – a single jet of water splashed into a basin center under the arch. In 1704, three additional entrances to the Colonnade were added, which reduced the number of fountains from 31 to 28. The statute that currently occupies the center of the Colonnade – the Abduction of Persephone – (from the Grande Commande of 1664) was set in place in 1696.

====Galerie des Antiques====

1680
* Occupying the site of the Galerie d’Eau (1678), the Galerie des Antiques was designed to house the collection of antique statues and copes of antique statues acquired by the [[Académie de France]] in Rome. Surrounding a central area paved with colored stone, a channel was decorated with 20 statues on plinths each separated by three jets of water. The galerie was completely remodeled in 1704 when the statues were transferred to Marly and the bosquet was replanted with chestnut tree – hence the current name: Salle des Marronniers.

====Salle de Bal====

1681-1683
[[Image:Versailles-BosquetSalleBal.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Bosquet of the Salle de Bal]]
* Located west of the Parterre du Midi and south of the Latona Fountain, this bosquet features a semi-circular cascade that forms the backdrop for this ''salle de verdure''. Interspersed with gilt lead girandoles, which supported candelabra, the Salle de Bal was inaugurated in 1683 by Louis XIV’s son, the [[Grand Dauphin]], with a dance party. The Salle de Bal was remodeled in 1707 when the central island was removed and an additional entrance was added.

===Replantations of the Garden===

Common to any long-lived garden is replantation, and Versailles is no exception. In their history, the gardens of Versailles have undergone no less than five major replantations, which have been executed for practical and esthetic reasons.

1774-1775
* During the winter of 1774-1775, [[Louis XVI]] ordered the replanting of the gardens on the grounds that many of the tress were diseased or over-grown and needed to be replaced. Also, as the formality of the 17th century garden had fallen out of fashion, this replantation sought to establish a new informality in the gardens – that would also be less expensive to maintain – of Versailles. This, however, was not achieved as the topology of the gardens favored the ''jardins français'' over an English-style garden.

1860-1883
* In 1860, much of the old growth from [[Louis XVI]]'s replanting was removed and replaced. Then, in 1870, a violent storm struck the area damaging and uprooting scores of trees. Owing to the [[Franco-Prussian War]] and the ''[[Commune de Paris]]'', which toppled [[Napoléon III]], replantation of the garden did not get underway until 1883.

1990-1999
* The most recent replantations of the gardens were precipitated by two storms that battered Versailles in 1990 and then again in 1999. The storm damage at Versailles and Trianon amounted to the loss of thousands of trees – the worse such damage in the history of Versailles. The replantations have allowed museum and governmental authorities to restore and rebuild some of the bosquets abandoned during the reign of [[Louis XVI]], such as the Bosquet des Trois Fontaines (restored in 2004).

Owing to the natural cycle of replantations that has occurred at Versailles, it is safe to state that no trees dating from the time of [[Louis XIV]] are to be found in the gardens.

===The Problem of Water===

The marvel of the gardens of Versailles – then as now – is the fountains. Yet, the very element that animates the gardens – water – has proven to be the affliction of the gardens since the time of Louis XIV.

The gardens of [[Louis XIII]] required water, but local ponds provided an adequate supply. However, once [[Louis XIV]] began expanding the gardens with more and more fountains, supplying the gardens with water became a critical challenge.

To meet the needs of the early expansions of the gardens under [[Louis XIV]], water was pumped to gardens from ponds near the chateau, with the [[Clagny]] pond serving as the principle source.<ref>The Clagny pond, which was located near the Rive droite train station in the city of Versailles, was filled in during the 18th century due to sanitary concerns.</ref> Water from the pond was pumped to the reservoir on top of the Grotte de Téthys, which fed the fountains in the garden by means of gravitational hydraulics. Other sources included a series of reservoirs located on the [[Satory Plateau]] south of the chateau.

By 1664, increased demand for water necessitated additional sources. In this year, [[Louis LeVau]] designed the Pompe, a water tower built north of the chateau. The Pompe drew water from the [[Clagny]] pond using a system of windmills and horsepower to a cistern housed in the Pompe’s building. The capacity of the Pompe – 600 m<sup>3</sup> of water per day – alleviated some of the water shortages in the garden.

With the completion of the Grand Canal in 1671, which served as drainage for the fountains of the garden, water, via a system of windmills, was pumped back to the reservoir on top of the Grotte de Téthys. While this system solved some of the water supply problems, there was never enough water to keep all of the fountains running in the garden in full-play all of the time.

While it was possible to keep the fountains in view from the chateau running, those concealed in the bosquets and in the farther reaches of the garden were run on an as needed basis. In 1672, [[Jean-Baptiste Colbert]] devised a system by which the fountaineers in the garden would signal each other with whistles upon the approach of the king indicating that their fountain needed to be turned on. Once the king passed a fountain in play, it would be turned off and the fountaineer would signal that the next fountain could be turned on.

In 1674, the Pompe was enlarged – hence referred to as the Grande Pompe. Pumping capacity was increased via increased horsepower and the number of pistons used for lifting the water. These improvements increased the water capacity to nearly 3,000 m<sup>3</sup> of water per day; however, the increased capacity of the Grande Pompe often left the Clagny pond dry.

The increasing demand for water and the stress placed on existing systems of water supply necessitated newer measures to increase the water supplied to Versailles. Between 1668-1674 a project was undertaken to divert the water of the Bièvre river to Versailles. By damming the river and a pumping system of five windmills, water was brought to the reservoirs located on the Satory Plateau. This system brought an additional 72,000 m<sup>3</sup> of water to the gardens.

Despite the augmentation of water from the Bièvre, the gardens needed still more water, which necessitated more projects. In 1681, one of the most ambitious water projects conceived during the reign of Louis XIV was undertaken. Owing to the proximity of the Seine to Versailles, a project was proposed to raise the water from the river to be delivered to Versailles. Seizing upon the success of a system devised in 1680 that raised water for the Seine to the gardens of [[Saint-Germain]], construction of the [[Machine de Marly]] began the following year.[[Image:MachineMarly.JPG|thumb|right|250px|''La machine de Marly'' by Pierre-Denis Martin, 1723]]

The [[Machine de Marly]] was designed to lift water from the Seine in three stages to the Louvencienne aqueduct some 100 meters above the level of the river. A series of huge waterwheels were constructed in the river, which raised the water via a system of 64 pumps to a reservoir 48 meters above the river. From this first reservoir, water was raised an additional 56 meters to a second reservoir by a system of 79 pumps. Finally, 78 additional pumps raised the water to the aqueduct, which carried the water to Versailles and Marly.

In 1685, the [[Machine de Marly]] came into full operation. However, owing to leakage in the conduits and breakdowns of the mechanism, the machine was only able to deliver 3,200 m<sup>3</sup> of water per day – approximately one-half the expected output.<ref>Water from the [[Machine de Marly]] could be diverted for use at either Versailles or [[Marly]] but not to both.</ref> The machine was a must see for visitors to France. Despite the fact that the gardens consumed more water per day than the entire city of Paris, the [[Machine de Marly]] remained in operation until 1817.

During Louis XIV’s reign, water supply systems represented one-third of the building costs of Versailles. Even with the additionally output from the Machine de Marly, fountains in the garden could only be run ''à l’ordinaire'' – which is to say at half-pressure. With this measure of economy, fountains stilled consumed 12,800 m<sup>3</sup> of water per day, far above the capacity of the existing supplies. In the case of the Grandes Eaux – when all the fountains played to their maximum – more than 10,000 m<sup>3</sup> of water was needed for one afternoon’s display. Accordingly, the Grandes Eaux were reserved for special occasions such as the [[Siamese Embassy]] of 1685-1686. One final attempt to solve water shortage problems was undertaken in 1685.

In this year it was proposed to divert the water of the Eure river, located 160 km. south of Versailles and at a level 26 m. above the garden reservoirs. The project called not only for digging a canal and construction of an aqueduct it also necessitated the construction of shipping channels and locks to supply the workers on the main canal. Between 9,000-10,000 troops were pressed in service in 1685; the next year, more than 20,000 soldiers were engaged in construction. Between 1686 and 1689, when the War of the League of Augsburg began, one-tenth of France’s military was at work on the Eure project. With the outbreak of the war, the project was abandoned, never to be completed. Had the Eure project been completed, some 50,000 m<sup>3</sup> of water would have been sent to Versailles – more than enough to solve the water problem of the gardens.

Today, the museum of Versailles is still faced with water problems. During the Grandes Eaux, water is circulated by means of modern pumps from the Grand Canal to the reservoirs. Replenishment of the water lost due to evaporation comes from rainwater, which is collected in cisterns that are located through out the gardens and diverted to the reservoirs and the Grand Canal. Assiduous husbanding of this resource by museum officials prevents tapping into the supply of potable water of the city of Versailles.

===Statistical Information on the gardens of Versailles===

*800 ha. park
*20 km. roads
*46 km. trellis work
*200,000 trees
*210,000 flowers planted annually
*132 km. of trees in rows
*23 ha. surface area of the Grand Canal
*5.57 km. perimeter of the Grand Canal
*20 km. enclosure wall
*50 fountains
*620 jets of water
*35 km. of water piping for the fountains
*3,600 m<sup>3</sup> water consummed by the fountains during the Grandes Eaux<ref>Source: Official site of the Chateau de Versailles: [www.chateauversailes.fr/fr/331_Quelques_chiffres.php]</ref>

===Sources===
The following are sources that have contributed to the above article. It is not an exhaustive list, yet it represents the most readily available imprints:

*Berger, R. W. ''In the Gardens of the Sun King''. (Washington, 1985).
*Dangeau, Philippe de Courcillon, marquis de. ''Journal''. (Paris, 1854-60).
*Marie, Alfred. ''Naissance de Versailles''. (Paris, 1968).
*Marie, Alfred & Jeanne. ''Mansart à Versailles''. (Paris, 1972).
*Marie, Alfred & Jeanne. ''Versailles au temps de Louis XIV''. (Paris, 1976).
*Marquis de Sourches. ''Mémoires sur le règne de Louis XIV''. Ed. Cosnac & Pontel, 13 vol. (Paris, 1882-93).
*Nolhac, Pierre de. ''La creation de Versailles''. (Versailles, 1901).
*Nolhac, Pierre de. ''Versailles, Résidence de Louis XIV''. (Paris, 1925).
*Princesse Palatine, duchess d’Orléans. ''Lettres de Madame, duchesse d’Orléans''. (Paris, 1981).
*Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvoy, duc de. ''Memoires''. 7 vols. (Paris, 1953-61).
*Thompson, Ian. ''The Sun King’s Garden: Louis XIV, André LeNôtre and the Creation of the Gardens of Versailles''. (London, 2006)
*Verlet, Pierre. ''Versailles''. (Paris, 1985).


==Subsidiary Structures==
==Subsidiary Structures==

Revision as of 17:48, 7 February 2008

Palace and Park of Versailles
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Versailles: Louis Le Vau opened up the interior court to create the expansive entrance cour d'honneur, later copied all over Europe.
CriteriaCultural: i, ii, vi
Reference83
Inscription1979 (3rd Session)

The Château de Versailles, or simply Versailles, is a royal château in Versailles, France.

In English it is often referred to as the Palace of Versailles. When the château was built, Versailles was a country village, but it is now a suburb of Paris. From 1682, when King Louis XIV moved from Paris, until the royal family was forced to return to the capital in 1789, the Court of Versailles was the centre of power in Ancien Régime France. Versailles is therefore famous not only as a building, but as a symbol of the system of absolute monarchy which Louis XIV espoused.

Expansion under the rule of Louis XIV

Louis' successor, Louis XIV, took a great interest in Versailles. He had grown up in the disorders of the civil war between rival factions of aristocrats called the Fronde, and wanted a site where he could organize and completely control a government of France by absolute personal rule. He settled on the royal hunting lodge at Versailles, and over the following decades had it expanded into the largest palace in the world. Beginning in 1669, the architect, Louis Le Vau, and the landscape architect, André Le Nôtre, began a detailed renovation of the château. It was Louis XIV's hope to create a center for the royal court. Following the Treaty of Nijmegen in 1678, the court and French government began to be moved to Versailles. The court was officially established there on 6 May 1682..

By moving the royal court and the seat of the French government, Louis XIV hoped to gain greater control of the government from the nobility, and to distance himself from the population of Paris. All the power of France emanated from this centre: there were government offices here, as well as the homes of thousands of courtiers, their retinues, and all the attendant functionaries of court. By requiring that nobles of a certain rank and position spend time each year at Versailles, Louis prevented them from developing their own regional power at the expense of his own and kept them from countering his efforts to centralize the French government in an absolute monarchy. The meticulous and strictured court etiquette that Louis XIV established, which overwhelmed his heirs with its petty boredoms, was epitomized in the elaborate procedures accompanying his rising in the morning, known as the Lever, divided into a petit lever for the most important and a grand lever for the whole court. Like other French court manners, " l' etiquette" was quickly imitated in other European courts.

Evolution of Versailles

Upon the death of Jules Cardinal Mazarin in 1661, who had served as co-regent during the minority of Louis XIV, Louis XIV (b. 5 September 1638 at Saint-Germain-en-Laye; d. 1 September 1715 at Versailles; reigned 14 May 1642 – 1 September 1715) began his personal reign by vowing to be his own prime minister. From this point, construction and expansion at Versailles became synonymous with the absolutism of Louis XIV.

After the disgrace of Nicolas Fouquet in 1661 — Louis claimed the finance minister would not have been able to build his grand château at Vaux-le-Vicomte without having embezzled from the crown — Louis XIV, after confiscation of Fouquet’s estate, employed the talents of architect Louis Le Vau, landscape architect André Le Nôtre, and painter/decorator Charles Le Brun for his building campaigns at Versailles and elsewhere. For Versailles, there were four distinct building campaigns (after minor alterations and enlargements had been executed on the château and the gardens in 1662-1663), all of which corresponded to Louis XIV’s wars.

1st building campaign

The First Building Campaign (1664-1668) commenced with the Plaisirs de l’Île enchantée of 1664, a party that was held between 7th and 13th May 1664. The party was ostensibly given to celebrate the two queens of France — Anne of Austria, the Queen Mother and Marie-Thérèse, Louis XIV’s wife, but in reality celebrated the king’s mistress, Louise de La Vallière. The fête of the Plaisirs de l’Île enchantée is often regarded as a prelude to the War of Devolution, which Louis XIV waged against Spain — both the Queen Mother and Marie-Thérèse were Spanish by birth — from 1667 to 1668). The First Building Campaign (1664-1668) saw alterations in the château and gardens in order to accommodate the 600 guests invited to the party.

2nd building campaign

The Second Building Campaign (1669-1672) was inaugurated with the signing of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (the treaty that ended the War of Devolution). During this campaign, the château began to assume some of the appearance that it has today. The most important modification of the château was Louis LeVau’s envelope of Louis XIII’s hunting lodge. The envelope — often referred to as the château neuf to distinguish it from the older structure of Louis XIII — enclosed the hunting lodge on the north, west, and south. The new structure provided new lodgings for members of the king and his family. The main floor — the piano nobile — of the château neuf was given over entirely to two apartments, one for the king and one for the queen. The Grand appartement du roi occupied the northern part of the château neuf and Grand appartement de la reine occupied the southern part. The western part of the envelope was given over almost entirely to a terrace, which was later destroyed for construction of the Hall of Mirrors (Galerie des Glaces). The ground floor of the northern part of the château neuf was occupied by the appartement des bains, which included a sunken octagonal tub with hot and cold running water. The king’s brother and sister-in-law, the duc and duchesse d’Orléans occupied apartments on the ground floor of the southern part of the château neuf. The upper story of the château neuf was reserved for private rooms for the king to the north and rooms for the king’s children above the queen’s apartment to the south.

Significant to the design and construction of the grands appartements is that the rooms of both apartments are of the same configuration and dimensions — a hitherto unprecedented feature in French palace design. In his monograph “Il n’y plus des Pyrenées: the Iconography of the first Versailles of Louis XIV,” Kevin Olin Johnson posited the hypothesis that the unprecedented similarity to the king and queen’s apartments represented Louis XIV’s wish to establish his wife as queen of Spain. In doing so, a dual monarchy of sorts would have been created. Louis XIV’s rationale for the joining of the two kingdoms was seen largely as recompense for Philip IV's failure to pay his daughter Marie-Thérèse’s dowry, which was among the terms of capitulation to which Spain agreed with the promulgation of the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659, ending the war between Spain and France that had been waged since 1635). Louis XIV regarded his father-in-law’s act as a breach of the treaty and consequently engaged in the War of Devolution.

Both the grand appartement du roi and the grand appartement de la reine formed a suite of seven enfilade rooms. Each room is dedicated to one of the then-known celestial bodies and is personified by the appropriate Greco-Roman deity. The decoration of the rooms, which was conducted under the direction of the Charles Le Brun, depicted the “heroic actions of the king” and were represented in allegorical form by the actions of historical figures from the antique past (Alexander the Great, Augustus, Cyrus, etc.).

3rd building campaign

With the signing of the Treaty of Nijmegen (1678, which ended the Dutch War of 1672-1678), the Third Building Campaign at Versailles began (1678-1684). Under the direction of the architect, Jules Hardouin Mansart, the palace of Versailles acquired much of the look that it has today. In addition to the Hall of Mirrors, Mansart designed the north and south wings (which were used by the nobility and Princes of the Blood, respectively), and the Orangerie. Charles Le Brun was occupied not only with the interior decoration of the new additions of the palace, but also collaborated with André Le Notre in landscaping the palace gardens. As symbol of France’s new prominence as a European super-power, Louis XIV officially installed his court at Versailles in May of 1682.

4th building campaign

Soon after the crushing defeat of the War of the League of Augsburg (1688-1697) and owing possibly to the pious influence of Madame de Maintenon, Louis XIV undertook his last building campaign at Versailles. The fourth building campaign (1701-1710) concentrated almost exclusively on construction of the Chapel Royal, designed by Mansart and finished by Robert de Cotte and his team of decorative designers. There were also some modifications in the king’s Petit Appartement, namely the construction of the Salon de l’Oeil de Boeuf and the King’s Bedchamber. With the completion of the chapel in 1710, virtually all construction at Versailles ceased; building would not be resumed at Versailles until some 20 years later during the reign of Louis XV.

Sources

  • André Félibien, Description sommaire du chasteau de Versailles, (Paris, 1674)
  • Pierre de Nolhac, La création de Versailles, (Versailles, 1901).
  • Pierre de Nolhac, Versailles, résidence de Louis XIV, (Paris, 1925).
  • Pierre de Nolhac, Histoire de Versailles. 3 vol. (Paris, 1911).
  • Kevin Olin Johnson, “Il n’y plus de Pyrenées : Iconography of the first Versailles of Louis XIV,” Gazette des Beaux-Arts (6e pér., vol. 97, janvier 1981) : 29-40.

Features

Grand Appartement du Roi

Lit de parade, Salon of Mercury. The clock, by Antoine Morand, was offered to Louis XIV in 1706. It is the only piece of furniture from the Grand Appartement that has survived, however the original Boulle marquetry case has been replaced.

As a result of Louis LeVau’s envelope of Louis XIII’s château, the king and queen had new apartments in the new addition, known at the time as the château neuf. The State Apartments, which are known respectively as the grand appartement du roi and the grand appartement de la reine, occupied the main or principal floor of the château neuf. LeVau’s design for the state apartments closely followed Italian models of the day, as evidenced by the placement of the apartments on the next floor up from the ground level — the piano nobile — a convention the architect borrowed from 16th and 17th century Italian palace design.

Le Vau’s plan called for an enfilade of seven rooms, each dedicated to one of the then-known planets and their associated titular Roman deity. LeVau’s plan was bold as he designed a heliocentric system that centered on the salon d’Apollon (Salon of Apollo). The salon d’Apollon originally was designed as the king’s bedchamber, but served as a throne room.[1] The original arrangement of the enfilade of rooms was thus:

The configuration of the grand appartement du roi conformed to contemporary conventions in palace design.[3] However, owing to Louis XIV’s personal tastes[4] the grand appartement du roi was reserved for court functions — such as the thrice-weekly appartement evenings given by Louis XIV.

The rooms were decorated by Charles LeBrun and demonstrated Italian influences (LeBrun met and studied with the famed Tuscan artist Pietro da Cortona, whose decorative style of the Pitti Palace in Florence LeBrun adapted for use at Versailles). The quadratura style of the ceilings evoke Cortona’s sale dei planeti at the Pitti, but LeBrun’s decorative schema is more complex. In his 1674 publication about the grand appartement du roi, André Félibien described the scenes depicted in the coves of the ceilings of the rooms as allegories depicting the “heroic actions of the king.”[5] Accordingly, one finds scenes of the exploits of Augustus, Alexander the Great, and Cyrus alluding to the deeds of Louis XIV. For example, in the salon d’Apollon, the cove painting “Augustus building the port of Misenum”[6] alludes to the construction of the port at La Rochelle; or, depicted in the south cove of the salon de Mercure is “Ptolemy II Philadelphus in his Library”, which alludes to Ptolemy’s construction of the Great Library of Alexandria and which accordingly serves as an allegory to Louis XIV’s expansion of the Bibliothèque du roi.[7][8] Complementing the rooms’ decors were pieces of massive silver furniture. Regrettably, owing to the War of the League of Augsburg, in 1689 Louis XIV ordered all of this silver furniture to be sent to the mint, to be melted down to help defray the cost of the war.

LeVau’s original plan for the grand appartement du roi was short-lived. With the inauguration of the 2nd building campaign, which suppressed the terrace linking the king and queen’s apartments and the salons of Jupiter, Saturn and Venus for the construction of the Hall of Mirrors, the configuration of the grand appartement du roi was altered. The decor of the salon de Jupiter was removed and reused in the decoration of the salle des gardes de la reine; and elements of the decoration of the first salon de Vénus, which opened onto the terrace, were reused in the salon de Vénus that we see today.[9]

From 1678 to the end of Louis XIV’s reign, the grand appartement du roi served as the venue for the king’s thrice-weekly evening receptions, known as les soirées de l’appartement. For these parties, the rooms assumed specific functions:

In the 18th century during the reign of Louis XV, the grand appartement du roi was expanded to include the salon de l’Abondance — formerly the entry vestibule of the petit appartement du roi — and the salon d’Hercule — occupying the tribune level of the former chapel of the château.

Grand Appartement de la Reine

Forming a parallel enfilade with that of the grand appartement du roi, the grand appartement de la reine served as the residence of three queens of France — Marie-Thérèse d’Autriche, wife of Louis XIV; Marie Leszczyska, wife of Louis XV; and Marie-Antoinette, wife of Louis XVI (additionally, Louis XIV’s granddaughter-in-law, Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie, as duchesse de Bourgogne, occupied these rooms from 1697 (the year of her marriage) to her death in 1712).

The Queen's bedchamber. There is a barely discernible hidden door in the corner near the jewel cabinet by Schwerdfeger (1787) through which Marie Antoinette escaped the night of 5/6 October 1789 when the Paris mob stormed Versailles.

When Louis Le Vau’s envelope of the château vieux was completed, the grand appartement de la reine came to include a suite of seven enfilade rooms with an arrangement that mirrored almost exactly the grand appartement du roi. The configuration was:

  • Chapel — which was pendant with the salon de Diane in the grand appartement du roi[10]
  • Salle de gardes — which was pendant with the salon de Mars in the grand appartement du roi
  • Antichambre — which was pendant with the salon de Mercure in the grand appartement du roi
  • Chambre — which was pendant with the salon d’Apollon in the grand apartment du roi
  • Grand cabinet — which was pendant with the salon de Jupiter in the grand appartement du roi
  • Oratory — which was pendant with the salon de Saturne in the grand appartement du roi
  • Petit cabinet — which was pendant with the salon de Vénus in the grand appartement du roi[11]

As with the decoration of the ceiling in the grand appartement du roi, which depicted the heroic actions of Louis XIV as allegories from events taken from the antique past, the decoration of the grand appartement de la reine likewise depicted heroines from the antique past and harmonized with the general theme of a particular room’s decor.[12]

With the construction of the Hall of Mirrors, which began in 1678, the configuration of the grand appartement de la reine changed. The chapel was transformed into the salle des gardes de la reine and it was in this room that the decorations from the salon de Jupiter were reused.[13] The salle des gardes de la reine communicates with a loggia that issues from the escalier de la reine, which formed a parallel pendant (albeit a smaller, though similarly-decorated example) with the escalier des ambassadeurs in the grand appartement du roi. The loggia also provides access to the appartement du roi, the suite of rooms in which Louis XIV lived. Toward the end of Louis XIV’s reign, the escalier de la reine became the principal entrance to the château, with the escalier des ambassadeurs used on rare state occasions. After the destruction of the escalier des ambassadeurs in 1752, the escalier de la reine became the main entrance to the château.

From 1682, the grand appartement de la reine included:

  • Salle des gardes de la reine
  • Antichambre (formerly the salle des gardes)
  • Grand cabinet
  • Chambre de la reine

With the death of Louis XIV in 1715, the court moved to Vincennes and later to Paris. In 1722, Louis XV reinstalled the court at Versailles and began modifications to the château’s interior. Among the most noteworthy of the building projects during Louis XV’s reign, the redecoration of the chamber de la reine must be cited.

To commemorate the birth of his only son and heir, Louis-Ferdinand, in 1729, Louis XV ordered a complete redecoration of the room. Elements of the chamber de la reine as it had been used by Marie-Thérèse and Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie were removed and a new, more modern decor was installed.[14]

During her life at Versailles, Marie Leszczynska (1703-1768) lived in the grand apartment de la reine, to which she annexed the salon de la paix to serve as a music room. In 1770, when the Austrian archduchess Marie-Antoinette married the dauphin, later Louis XVI, she took up residence in these rooms. Upon Louis XVI’s ascension to the throne in 1774, Marie-Antoinette ordered major redecoration of the grand appartement de la reine. At this time, the queen’s apartment achieved the arrangement that we see today.

  • Salle des gardes de la reine — this room remained virtually unchanged by Marie-Antoinette.[15]
  • Antichambre — this room was transformed into the antichambre du grand couvert. It was in this room that the king, queen, and members of the royal family dined in public. Occasionally, this room served as a theater for the château.
  • Grand cabinet — this room was transformed into the salon des nobles. Following the tradition established by her predecessor, Marie-Antoinette would hold formal audiences in this room. When not used for formal audiences, the salon des nobles served as an antechamber to the queen’s bedroom.
  • Chambre de la reine — this room was used as the queen’s bedroom, and was of exceptional splendor. On the night of 6/7 October 1789, Marie-Antoinette fled from the Paris mob by escaping through a private corridor that connected her apartment with that of the king.

Appartement du Roi (King's Private Apartments)

Le chambre du roi. This room, dating from Louis XIV 4th building campaign, formed the physical and ideological center to the palace of Versailles.

Overlooking the cour de marbre, these rooms, which are situated in the château vieux, were once the private apartment of Louis XIII. During Louis XIV’s 3rd building campaign, this suite of rooms were enlarged and decorated for the king’s daily use. In 1684, the apartment du roi comprised the following rooms:

  • Salle des gardes — this room served as a guard room for the king’s body guard (this room issued from the loggia and landing of the Queen’s Staircase).
  • Première antichambre or antichambre du grand couvert — in this room, Louis XIV ate in public, a ceremony known as the grand couvert. Additionally, once a week Louis XIV would personally accept petitions from his subjects.
  • Antichambre des Bassans — this room took its name from the collection of paintings by the 16th century Venetian master Jacop Bassano that were displayed in this room.
  • Chambre du roi — this was the king’s bedchamber, until 1701.
  • Salon du Roi — located in the center of the château, this room served for the king’s grand levé — the daily morning ritual in which the king was dressed in public.
  • Cabinet du roi — the room served as a council room for Louis XIV.
  • Cabinet des termes — this room was thus named owing to its decoration; it served, however, as the room in which Louis XIV’s wigs —- more than 500 — were kept.

In 1701, as part of Louis XIV’s 4th building campaign, the configuration of the appartement du roi altered.

  • The salle des gardes remained unchanged.
  • Première antichambre or antichambre du grand couvert — this room likewise remained unchanged.
  • The antichambre des Bassans and the chamber du roi were combined to form the seconde antichambre — better known as the salon de l’oeil de boeuf.
  • The salon du roi was converted into the chamber du roi.
  • The cabinet du roi and cabinet des termes remained until 1755 at which time Louis XV combined them to create the cabinet du conseil.

Le petit appartement du Roi; l’appartement interieur du Roi

From 1683 to 1693, during Louis XIV’s 3rd building campaign, the king ordered the construction of the appartement des collections (also know as the appartement des raretés). This apartment comprised:

  • le Salon ovale
  • le cabinet aux tableaux
  • le cabinet aux coquilles
  • le cabinet aux médailles
  • la petite galerie (with its two salons)[16]
  • le cabinet du billard

The appartement des collections housed the rarest and most valuable of the artworks in Louis XIV’s collection. Access to these rooms was by personal invitation of Louis XIV, and descriptions of the collections have survived. These are some of the objects housed in the appartement des collections:

  • Large vases garnished with gold and diamonds
  • Antique busts
  • A nef (a vessel used at meals in which a damp napkin was kept to wipe one's fingers — these types of vessels were common before the practice of eating with a fork became popular) garnished with diamonds and rubies (this nef, which was stripped of its gems and melted down during the French Revolution, was, nevertheless, depicted in the ceiling of the salon de l’Abondance.)
  • Chinese and Japanese porcelains
  • Vases carved from various semi-precious stones
  • Paintings[17]

Between 1738 and 1760, Louis XV instituted significant changes to the appartement des collections. In 1738, the king ordered the construction of a new bedroom — la nouvelle chambre — as Louis XIV’s old bedroom was too uncomfortable in the winter to use for anything but his morning lévé. The arrangement of the petit appartement du roi ca. 1760 was:

  • La nouvelle chambre — this room was constructed on the site of Louis XIV's billiard room.
  • Le cabinet de la Pendule — this room was created by surpassing the staircase of Louis XIII and combining it with the cabinet aux tableaux. The room, which served as a gaming room, derives its name from the astronomical clock built by Passemant and Dauthia (the gilt-bronze case of the clock is by Caffieri).
  • Le cabinet des Chiens — this room was reserved for Louis XV’s hunting dogs.
  • La salle à manger des retours de chasse — this was a small dining room used by Louis XV to entertain his friends after hunting.[18]
  • Le cabinet intérieur du roi — was constructed in 1755 and was used as a private workroom for Louis XV. The room’s main feature is the roll-top desk by Oeben and Riesener, which by turning one key opens the roll-top and the drawers of the desk. This is the only piece of furniture original to Versailles that was neither sold during the Revolution nor removed from the château.
  • La pièce de la vaisselle d'or or le Cabinet de Mme Adélaïde — constructed in 1752, after the destruction of the escalier des ambassadeurs (this room was originally one of the two salons of the petite gallerie), this room served as the room in which Louis XV’s gold tableware was displayed and where his daughter, Mme Adélaïde, had her music room.[19]
  • La Bibliothèque — dating from 1774, the library, which occupies the site of the petite gallerie — was to be Louis XVI’s most significant contribution to Versailles.
  • La salle à manger aux salles neuves — also known as the salle des porcelains, it was in this room that the royal family dined in private during the reign of Louis XVI. Every year during the Christmas season, samples of that year’s production from the porcelain factory at Sèvres would be displayed here. This room originally was one of the two salons of the petite gallerie.
  • La salle de Billard and le salon des Jeux were built in 1795 and occupy space in what was part of Mme de Montespan’s apartment. The rooms issue from the salle à manger aux salles neuves and were used by the royal family for evening entertainment.

Le petit appartement de la Reine

These rooms, situated behind the grand appartement de la reine, and which now open onto two interior courtyards, were the private domain of the queens of France, Marie-Thérèse, Marie Leszczyska, and Marie-Antoinette. Evolving with the building campaigns of Louis XIV, the petit appartement de la reine[20], likewise evolved.

Marie-Thérèse

At the completion of LeVau’s envelope, a suite of small rooms opened onto the cour de marbre (rooms later incorporated into the appartement du roi) and onto a small interior courtyard — at the time called the cour de la reine. In these rooms, Marie-Thérèse led her private and family life. Very little information survived about the décor or the arrangement of these rooms, owing largely to her early death in 1683. What is known is that a redecoration of these rooms occurred in 1697 when Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie married Louis XIV's grandson, the duc de Bourgogne. When Marie-Adélaïde died in 1712, the rooms were divided among the king and various other residents.

Marie Leszczyska

From the time of her marriage, the petit appartement de la reine underwent a number of transitions. One of the more significant transitions occurred when additional rooms were built. With these new rooms, the cour de la reine was divided into two courtyards — the cour du dauphin (to the east) and the cour du Monseigneur (to the west). With regard to these rooms, Pierre de Nolhac published a partial description of the petit appartement de la reine as it appeared at the time of the death of Marie-Leszczyska:

  • oratory
  • annex to the oratory
  • boudoir
  • grand cabinet
  • bathroom
  • laboratory (Marie-Leszczyska was known to have had a strong interest in science.)

None of the décor of the petit appartement de la reine — except for a small room that communicates between the grand cabinet and the appartement du roi — has survived. When Marie-Antoinette moved into these rooms in 1774, a complete reorganization and redecoration of the rooms, under the direction of Richard Mique, was ordered.

Marie-Antoinette

The fame of the petit appartement de la reine rests squarely in the hands of the last queen of France during the Ancien Régime. The restored state of the rooms that one sees today at Versailles replicate the petit appartement de la reine as it probably looked during Marie-Antoinette’s day. The principle rooms of the petit appartement are:

  • cabinet doré (former grand cabinet of Marie Leszczyska)
  • library
  • annex to the library[21]
  • billiard room
  • cabinet de la méridienne
  • bathroom
  • toilette à l’anglaise[22]
  • various service rooms
  • fun rooms

During Marie-Antoinette's day, these rooms served the queen’s daily private life. For example, in the morning, the cabinet de la méridienne, which was decorated by Richard Mique to commemorate the birth of the dauphin, was the room in which Marie-Antoinette would choose the clothing she would wear that day.[23]

Of all the features of the petit appartement de la reine, the so-called secret passage that links the grand appartement de la reine with the appartement du roi must be cited. The passage actually dates from the time of Marie-Thérèse, and had always served as a private means by which the king and queen could communicate with each other.[24] It is true, however, that Marie-Antoinette, who was sleeping in the chambre de la reine in the grande appartement de reine, escaped from the Paris mob on the night of 6/7 October 1789 by using this route. The entrance to the so-called secret passage is through a door located on the west side of the north wall of the chambre de la reine.

Galerie des Glaces

Galerie des Glaces

As the central and most remarkable feature of Louis XIV’s third building campaign, construction of the galerie des glaces — The Hall of Mirrors — began in 1678. To provide for the galerie des glaces as well as the salon de la guerre and the salon de la paix, which connect the grand appartement du roi with the grand appartement de la reine, architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart appropriated three rooms from each apartment.[25] as well as the terrace that separated their two domains within the palace. The principal feature of this famous galerie is the seventeen mirror-clad arches that reflect the seventeen arcaded windows that overlook the gardens. Each arch contains twenty-one mirrors with a total complement of 357 used in the decoration of the galerie des glaces. The arches themselves are fixed upon marble pilasters whose capitals depict the symbols of France. These gilded bronze capitals include the fleur-de-lys and the Gallic cockerel or rooster. Many of the other attributes of the Hall of Mirrors were lost to war for financial purposes. Items such as the silver table pieces and lamp holders were melted by order of Louis XIV himself to provide monetary provisions for the war.

In the 17th century, mirrors were one of the most expensive items to possess and at the time, the Venetian Republic held the monopoly on the manufacture of mirrors. In order to maintain the integrity of his philosophy of mercantilism, which required that all items used in the decoration of Versailles be made in France, Jean-Baptiste Colbert enticed several workers from Venice to make mirrors at the Gobelins Factory[26]

The galerie des glaces’ dimensions are 73.0 m × 10.5 m × 12.3 m (239.5 ft × 34.4 ft × 40.4 ft) and is flanked by the salon de la guerre (north) and the salon de la paix (south). Construction on the galerie and its two salons continued until 1684, at which time it was pressed into use for court and state functions. The ceiling decoration is dedicated to the military victories of Louis XIV. The present decorative schema represents the last of three that were presented to Louis XIV. The original decorative plan was to have depicted the exploits of Apollo, being consistent with the imagery associated with the Sun-King, Louis XIV. However, when the king learned that his brother, Philippe d'Orléans, had commissioned Pierre Mignard to decorate the ceiling of the grand galerie of his brother’s residence at Château de Saint-Cloud, Louis XIV rejected the plan. The next decorative plan was one in which the exploits of Hercules — as allegories to the actions of Louis XIV — were to be depicted. Again, as with the first plan, the Hercules theme was rejected by the king. The final plan represents military victories of Louis XIV starting with the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659) to the Treaty of Nijmegen (1678-1679). In a departure from the decoration of the ceilings in the grand appartement du roi, LeBrun has depicted Louis XIV directly, and has ceased to refer to the king in allegorical guises. In this way, themes such as good governance and military prowess are rendered with Louis XIV himself as the key figure.

Gilded sculptured guéridons were commissioned to replace part of the silver furniture.

During the 17th century, the galerie des glaces was used daily by Louis XIV when he walked from his private apartment to the chapel. At this time, courtiers assembled to watch the king and members of the royal family pass, and might make a particular request by intoning: “Sire, Marly?”[27] However, of all the events that transpired in this room during the reign of Louis XIV, the Siamese Embassy of 1685-1686 must be cited as the most opulent. At this time, the galerie des glaces and the grands appartements were still appointed with silver furniture. In February 1715, Louis XIV held his last embassy — which could be regarded as the swan song for his absolutism — in the galerie des glaces, one in which he received Mohamed Reza Beg, ambassador of the Shah of Persia. It was later revealed that the ambassador was bogus, and that the entire ceremony was orchestrated for the benefit of Louis XIV (who died in September of the same year).

In the successive reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, the galerie de glaces continued to serve for family and court functions. Embassies, births, and marriages were fêted in this room; however, perhaps the most celebrated event of the 18th century occurred on 25 February 1745: the celebrated Bal des Ifs (Ball of the Yew Trees). It was during this costume ball that Louis XV, who was dressed as a yew tree, met Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson d'Étiolles, who was costumed as Diana, goddess of the hunt. Jeanne-Antoinette, who became Louis XV’s mistress, is better known to history as the Marquise de Pompadour.

In the 19th century, at the conclusion of the Franco-Prussian War, the Persian king, William I, was declared German emperor — thus establishing the (second) German Empire — on 18 January 1871 in the Hall of Mirrors. On 28 June 1919, Clemenceau chose the Hall of Mirrors to sign the Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I. The Hall of Mirrors is still pressed into service for state occasions of the Fifth Republic, such as receptions for visiting heads of state.

Chapels of Versailles

One of the more curious aspects of Versailles is the chapels. The reign of Louis XIV, Versailles saw no fewer than five chapels.

1st Chapel
The château’s first chapel dated from the time of Louis XIII and was located in detached pavilion at the northeast of the château (today, La pièce de la vaisselle d'or or le Cabinet de Mme Adélaïde occupies the approximate site). This chapel, which followed the palatine model,[28]: a chapel of two floors, the upper floor reserved for the monarch and members of the royal family (corresponding with the main floor of the royal residence, so that the king would not be obligated to negotiate a stairway in order hear an ordinary mass), and the lower floor at ground level used by members of the court and the royal household. The king himself only descended to the lower floor of his chapels on rare and important occasions. Versailles' first chapel was destroyed in 1665 when the Grotto de Thétis was built.

2nd Chapel
The château’s second chapel was created during Louis XIV’s second building campaign. When the envelope of Louis LeVau was completed, the chapel was situated in the grand apartment de la reine (it formed the symmetrical pendant with the salon de Diane in the grand appartement du roi). This palatine model chapel was short-lived. When Louis XIV began his third building campaign, this chapel was converted to the salle des gardes de la reine.

3rd Chapel
Located next to the new salle des gardes de la reine, this chapel was itself transitory. Soon after its construction, Louis XIV found it inconvenient and impractical for his needs as well as those of his court. In 1682, this room was converted into the grande salles des gardes de la reine (and now exists as la salle du sacre).

4th Chapel
With the construction of the aile Nord, a new palatine model chapel was built. Construction of the North wing necessitated the destruction of the Grotto de Thétis; it was on this site that the new chapel was built in 1682.[29] This chapel remained in use by the king and court until 1710,[30]

5th Chapel

Versailles’ chapel is one of the palace's grandest interiors. This is the view as seen from the tribune royale, where the king and members of the royal family heard mass.

As the focal point of Louis XIV's fourth (and last) building campaign, the final chapel of the château of Versailles is an unreserved masterpiece. Begun in 1689, construction was halted due to the War of the League of Augsburg; Jules Hardouin-Mansart resumed construction in 1699. Hardouin-Mansart continued working on the project until his death in 1708, at which time his brother-in-law, Robert de Cotte, finished the project. It was to become the largest of the royal chapels at Versailles, and in fact the height of its vaulting alone was allowed to disturb the rather severe horizontality everywhere else apparent in the palace's roof-line, leading to the design being badly treated by some contemporaries at the time (most notably perhaps by the memoirist Saint-Simon, who considered it an "enormous catalfalque"). Nevertheless, the magnificent interior has been widely admired to the present day.

Dedicated to Saint Louis, patron saint of the Bourbons, the chapel was consecrated in 1710. The palatine model is of course traditional; however, the Corinthian colonnade of the tribune level is of a classic style that anticipates the neo-classicism of the late-18th century, although its contrivance here is of remarkable virtuosity. The tribune level is accessed by a vestibule that was constructed at the same time as the chapel[31] The floor of the chapel itself is inlaid with multi-colored marbles, and at the foot of the steps leading to the altar is Louis XIV’s crowned monogram of an interlaced double “L”. Adhering to ecclesiastical themes, the chapel’s decoration refers to both the Old and New Testaments: the ceiling of the nave represents “God the Father in His Glory Bringing to the World the Promise of Redemption” and was painted by Antoine Coypel; the half-dome of the apse is decorated with Charles de LaFosse’s “The Resurrection of Christ”; and, above the royal tribune is Jean Jouvenet’s “The Descent of the Holy Ghost upon the Virgin and the Apostles.”

During the 18th century, the chapel witnessed many court events. Te Deums were sung to celebrate military victories and the births of children born to the king and queen (fils de France); marriages were also celebrated in this chapel, such as the wedding of the dauphin — later Louis XVI — to Marie-Antoinette in 1770. However, of all the ceremonies held in the chapel, those associated the Order of Holy Spirit were among the most elaborate.

Today the chapel, which has been re-consecrated, serves a venue for chamber concerts.

L’Opéra

Since the time of Louis XIV, the château of Versailles had wanted — and needed — a permanent theater. Before the construction of l’Opéra, temporary theaters were constructed either in the gardens or in the château — grands appartements, escalier des ambassadeurs, aile de Midi — where the salle de spectacle of Louis XIV was short-lived — la grande écurie, la cour de marbre, etc. However, in 1740, Louis XV ordered Jacques-Anges Gabriel to build a permanent theater at the northern end of the aile de Nord, on the site that had been that chosen by Louis XIV[32] The project required some thirty years to complete based on financial restraints rising from the Seven Years War and relocating residents from the northern end of the aile de nobles. Construction work on the Opéra began in earnest in 1765 and was completed in 1770; at the time, it represented the finest example in theater design — having 712 seats, it was the largest theater in Europe at the time — and today remains one of the few theaters to survive the 18th century. Lully’s Persée inaugurated the Opéra on 16 May 1770 in celebration of the marriage of the dauphin — the future Louis XVI — with Marie-Antoinette.

Gabriel’s design for the Opéra was unique for the time as it featured an oval plan. As an economy measure, the floor of the orchestra level can be raised to the level the stage, thus doubling the floor space. It was planned that the Opéra should serve not only as a theater, but as ballroom or banqueting hall as well.[33] Built entirely of wood, which is painted in faux marbre to represent stone, the Opéra has excellent acoustics and represents one of the finest examples of neo-classical decoration. The theme of the decoration is related to Apollo and the Olympian deities. The decoration of the Opéra was directed by Augustin Pajou, who executed the bas-reliefs panels that decorate the front of the loges. The ceiling features a canvas by Louis Jean Jacques Durameau in which Apollo and the Muses are depicted.

In spite of the excellent acoustics and the opulent setting, the Opéra was not often used during the reign of Louis XVI, largely on grounds of costs. For a single performance to be held in the Opéra, no less than 3,000 candles were required. Given that tallow candles burned quickly and emitted soot and unpleasant odor, beeswax candles were used. During Louis XVI’s reign one beeswax candle represented approximately what one peasant earned in one week.

When the royal family left Versailles in October 1789, the château and the Opéra were closed. While the château did see some activity under Napoléon I (redecoration of the parts of the queen’s apartment for the empress Marie-Louise) and Louis XVIII, the Opéra did not reopen again until 1837, when Louis-Philippe redecorated the theater and presented Molière’s Le Misanthrope. In 1872, during the Commune de Paris, the Opéra was converted by Edmond de Joly for use by the Assemblée nationale, who used the Opéra until 1876; between 1876 and 1879, the Sénat convened here.[34] 1952-1957 witnessed major restoration of the Opéra when it was restored to its 1770 state. The Opéra officially reopened 9 April 1957 in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, with a presentation of Act II of Rameau’s Les Indes Galantes. Since its restoration, the Opéra has been pressed into service for state functions as well as a variety of operatic and musical events.

Social History

The politics of display

Versailles became the home of the French nobility and the location of the royal court - thus becoming the center of French government. Louis XIV himself lived there, and symbolically the central room of the long extensive symmetrical range of buildings was the King's Bedchamber (La Chambre du Roi), which itself was centered on the lavish and symbolic state bed, set behind a rich railing not unlike a communion rail. Indeed, even the principle axis of the gardens themselves was conceived to radiate from this fulcrum. All the power of France emanated from this centre: there were government offices here; as well as the homes of thousands of courtiers, their retinues and all the attendant functionaries of court. By requiring that nobles of a certain rank and position spend time each year at Versailles, Louis prevented them from developing their own regional power at the expense of his own, and kept them from countering his efforts to centralize the French government in an absolute monarchy. [citation needed]

At various periods before Louis XIV established absolute rule, France, like the Holy Roman Empire lacked central authority and was not the unified state it was to become during the proceeding centuries. During the Middle Ages some local nobles were at times more powerful than the French King and, although technically loyal to the King, they possessed their own provincial seats of power and government, culturally influential courts and armies loyal to them and not the King, and the right to levy their own taxes on their subjects. Some families were so powerful, they achieved international prominence and contracted marriage alliances with foreign royal houses to further their own political ambitions. Although nominally Kings of France, de facto royal power had at times been limited purely to the region around Paris. [citation needed]

Court etiquette

Life at the court was narrowly regulated by court etiquette. Etiquette became the means of social advancement for the court.

Louis XIV’s elaborate rules of etiquette included the following:

  1. People who wanted to speak to the king could not knock on his door. Instead, using the left little finger, they had to gently scratch on the door, until they were granted permission to enter. As a result, many courtiers grew that fingernail longer than the others;
  2. A lady never held hands or linked arms with a gentleman. Besides being in bad taste, this practice would have been impossible because a woman’s hooped skirts were so wide. Instead, she was to place her hand on top of the gentleman’s bent arm as they strolled through the gardens and chambers of Versailles. It is also mentioned that the ladies were only allowed to touch fingertips with the men.
  3. When a gentleman sat down, he slid his left foot in front of the other, placed his hands on the sides of the chair and gently lowered himself into the chair. There was a very practical reason for this procedure. If a gentleman sat too fast, his tight trousers might split;
  4. Women and men were not allowed to cross their legs in public;
  5. When a gentleman passed an acquaintance on the street, he was to raise his hat high off his head until the other person passed;
  6. A gentleman was to do no work except writing letters, giving speeches, practising fencing, or dancing. For pleasure he engaged in hawking, archery, indoor tennis, or hunting. A gentleman would also take part in battle and would sometimes serve as a public officer, paying the soldiers;
  7. Ladies’ clothing did not allow them to do much besides sit and walk. However, they passed the time sewing, knitting, writing letters, painting, making their own lace, and creating their own cosmetics and perfumes.[2]

In addition, etiquette ordained the order of prominence at court, limited or extended access based on rank or favor, rigidly maintained complex customs of address, and even who could sit or stand under what circumstances in the royal presence or that of the great nobles.

The Gardens of Versailles

Subsidiary Structures

At Versailles, four subsidiary structures merit discussion. Of these four buildings – the Ménagerie, the Trianon de Porcelaine, the Grand Trianon (also called the Marble Trianon), and the Petit Trianon – two have been destroyed (the Ménagerie and the Trianon de Porcelaine); however, historical documentation and accounts permit these two structures to be discussed. As an ensemble of buildings related to, yet removed from, the chateau of Versailles, they represent architectural masterworks of the 17th and 18th centuries that have inspired architects to this day.

The Ménagerie

Ménagerie de Versailles, 1662-64 ; 1698-1700

In response to increased interest in zoology – and especially with regard to Aristotelian teleology, which experienced a renaissance through the works of Claude Perrault – as well as the passion for the exotic, Louis XIV ordered the construction of the Ménagerie in 1662. Completed in 1664, the Ménagerie was located at the southern end of the transverse branch of the Grand Canal. Comprising a complex of building that featured a central octagonal two-story pavilion, the Ménagerie was a favorite destination for visitors and courtiers.

The ground floor of the central pavilion contained a salon frais, which was decorated with shell work to resemble a grotto.[35] On the second floor were a series of rooms, each with a balcony that overlooked the animal enclosures that surrounded the pavilion.

In 1697, the 12-year old Marie-Adélaïde de Savoie married Louis XIV grandson, Louis, duc de Bourgogne. The duchesse’s vivacity and precociousness quickly won the heart of the aging king, who presented the Ménagerie to the duchesse. Between 1698 and 1700 the interior was redecorated. In a stylistic departure from the esthetic of Louis XIV’s 4th building campaign in the chateau, which was characterized by courtly austerity, the new décor of the Ménagerie was characterized by a youthful exuberance that anticipated the Rococo style of Louis XV.

Regrettably, in 1801 the Ménagerie, which had been sold during the sales of land that occurred after the Revolution, was destroyed. Today, the Pavillion de la Lanterne – the only surviving vestige of the Ménagerie – is being restored providing us a glimpse of the cynegetic decoration of this lost Versailles Masterpiece.

The Trianon de Porcelaine

Plan of the Trianon de Porcelaine

Located at the northern end of the transverse arm of the Grand Canal, the Trianon de Porcelaine formed a pendant to the Ménagerie. Designed by Louis LeVau and François d’Orbay and built between 1669-1670 as a pleasure pavilion for Louis XIV and his mistress, the marquise de Montespan, the central pavilion and its four smaller buildings were covered with blue and white porcelain tiles – hence the name. Regrettably, the Trianon de Porcelaine was relatively short-lived, owing to the waning of the marquise de Montespan’s popularity and the maintenance of the exterior tile revetment – tiles would fracture and detach from the surface of the buildings due to the cold weather. In 1687, the Trianon de Porcelaine was destroyed; but, as the location of favored by Louis XIV, the Grand Trianon was built on the same site.[36]

The Grand Trianon

The Grand Trianon, as seen from the entry court (1678), Jules Hardouin-Mansart, architect

It has been said that Louis XIV built Versailles for his court, Trianon for his family, and Marly for his friends – and the Grand Trianon did serve the Sun King and his family. Built by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, the Grand Trianon is unabashedly one of his greatest works.[37] Constructed of pink Languedoc marble between 1687-1689 in an Italianate-style, this two-story structure succeeds – architecturally and stylistically – where the chateau of Versailles fails.[38]

“The Grand Trianon” by Jean-Baptiste Martin (ca.1700)

Jules Hardouin-Mansart designed the structure in two distinct sections. An entry courtyard separated the two principal wings of the building. To the left (south), this wing originally housed the service area as well as the private apartments of Louis XIV. The right (north) wing contained two enfilades – one opening to the upper garden to the west, the other opening to the wall enclosed jardin du roi to the east. The area opening to the north of the entry courtyard originally contained a small theater. The two wings communicate by an open colonnade, which also serves as a transitional element linking the courtyard with the gardens beyond.

Colonnade of the Grand Trianon (1678), Jules Hardouin-Mansart, architect

Situated perpendicular to the north wing is the Galerie. With a length of nearly 30 meters and lit by five windows on the north and 11 windows on the south, the Galerie is the largest room of the Grand Trianon and its placement serves as a northern protective barrier for the upper garden.[39]

Constructed west of the Galerie and running perpendicularly to the north is the wing known as Trianon-sous-bois. It was in this part of the house that Louis XIV provided apartments for members of his family. In the area east of Trianon-sous-bois and north of the Galerie was a marshy area that Jules Hardouin-Mansart converted into the jardin des sources. Reminiscent, of the bosquet des sources in the garden of Versailles, this area featured rivulets and islets set in a wooded setting.

As with the chateau of Versailles, the Grand Trianon underwent many changes and modifications during the reign of Louis XIV, especially the relocation of his apartment from the south wing to the north wing. However, significantly different from Versailles, was the decor of the Grand Trianon. Where Versailles’ decor extolled the heroic actions of Louis XIV in the guise of Augustus, Alexander, and Apollo, this didactic component is not evident in the décor of the Grand Trianon. The style of the Grand Trianon reflected a more relaxed atmosphere and life-style that was removed from the constraints of protocol and etiquette found at Versailles.[40]

During the reign of Louis XV, the Grand Trianon underwent minor modifications: the theater was removed and a suite of rooms opening onto the jardin du roi was redecorated for the marquise de Pompadour. Louis XVI effectively ignored the Grand Trianon; and, during the Revolution, the furniture – as at Versailles – was sold. However, unlike Versailles, the Grand Trianon did not have an uncertain future.

Napoléon I was enamored of the Grand Trianon and ordered the building remodeled and redecorated for his and his family’s use. During the reign of Louis-Philippe, the Grand Trianon was an especial favorite residence of the king and royal family. Much of the redecoration ordered under Napoléon I and Louis-Philippe is found today at the Grand Trianon.[41]

Republican France has retained – and restored to a prominent position – the Grand Trianon. During the administration of Charles de Gaule, the Grand Trianon was completely renovated and modernized – largely to accommodate his lavish banquets. Accordingly, Trianon-sous-bois was remodeled to provide modern living accommodations and the basement was completely renovated to accommodate modern professional kitchens.

The Grand Trianon has been designated an official residence of the French president and often serves as a residence for visiting heads of state. It was during the presidency of Jacques Chirac that Trianon-sous-bois was opened to limited public tours.

The Petit Trianon

Entry courtyard of the Petit Trianon designed by Jacques-Anges Gabriel

Located near the Grand Trianon, the Petit Trianon was build between 1762 and 1768 by Jacques-Anges Gabriel for Louis XV. The area that is now the Petit Trianon came to prominence when Louis XV established his jardins botaniques in the area that is now the Hameau de la reine. The Petit Trianon was intended to be used when the king was engaged in his botanical avocation. It would be, however, under Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette that the Petit Trianon would be immortalized. Shortly after his ascension to the throne, Louis XVI presented the Petit Trianon to Marie-Antoinette. Immediately thereafter, the queen ordered modification – largely under the direction of Richard Mique – to the Petit Trianon and its gardens. The house was remodeled, which necessitated the removal of the dumbwaiter system that Louis XV installed that allowed the dining table to be lowered to the kitchen level of the house, thus eliminating the need for servants in the dining room. At this time, the jardins botaniques were removed to Paris and the Hameau de la reine constructed in their stead.

The Queen's House (center)and the Tour de Malborough (left) Hameau de la reine in the park, built in 1783.

Far from being the folly of Marie-Antoinette, the Hameau was a model bucolic village and farm in which advances in agronomy and animal husbandry were practiced.[42]

Owing to the association with Marie-Antoinette’s alleged excesses – such as the construction of a theater where she and her friends acted to private audiences – the Petit Trianon and the Hameau were pillaged during the Revolution. Napoléon I presented the Petit Trianon to his mother, Letizia Buonaparte – a purely symbolic gesture as she never lived there. Louis-Philippe, in his turn, presented it to his wife, Marie Amélie, who refurbished the gardens and reappointed the house. In more recent times, the Petit Trianon and the Hameau de la reine have been undergoing an aggressive restoration program that is seeking to return them to their state when Marie-Antoinette left them in October 1789.


Sources

With regard to source materials for theses structures, the following list of imprints and articles has been used for this article:

  • Kimball, Fiske. “Le décor du château de la Ménagerie à Versailles.” Gazette des Beaux-Arts. 6. pér. (Décembre 1936): 245-256.
  • Kimball, Fiske. The Creation of the Rococo. (Philadelphia, 1943)
  • Mabile, Gérard. “La Ménagerie de Versailles.” Gazette des Beaux-Arts. 6. pér. (Janvier 1974): 5-34.
  • Marie, Alfred. Naissance de Versailles. (Paris, 1968).
  • Marie, Alfred & Jeanne. Mansart à Versailles. (Paris, 1972).
  • Marie, Alfred & Jeanne. Versailles au temps de Louis XIV. (Paris, 1976).
  • Marie, Alfred & Jeanne. Versailles au temps de Louis XV. (Paris, 1984).
  • Nolhac, Pierre de. La création de Versailles. (Versailles, 1901).
  • Nolhac, Pierre de. Versailles, Résidence de Louis XIV. (Paris, 1925).
  • Nolhac, Pierre de. Trianon. (Paris, 1925).
  • Nolhac, Pierre de. “Trianon de Porcelaine.” Revue de l’histoire de Versailles. (1901): 1-16.
  • Vanelot, Jean J. “La Ménagerie du château de Versailles: la grotte et les pavaillions.” Revue de l’histoire de Versailles. (1899): 81-96.
  • Verlet, Pierre. Versailles. (Paris, 1985).

Cost

Versailles was grand, luxurious, and expensive to maintain. It has been estimated that upkeep and maintenance, including the care and feeding of staff and the royal family, consumed as much as 25 percent of the total income of France [citation needed]. Although at first glance this may seem extraordinarily large, the Palace of Versailles was the centre of government as well as the royal residence. Additionally, the 25 percent figure is disputed by some historians who believe the number has been exaggerated by those who would exaggerate the role of royals' extravagance as causation for the French Revolution. Recent estimates suggest a number closer to 6 percent.[citation needed]

The book, World History: Patterns of Interactions (Mcdougal Littell/Houghton Mifflin, 2001) places the value at approximately US$2 billion (1994). This valuation is regarded by many as a gross underestimate.[citation needed] Surviving government records from the period mention 65 million golden livres. It is unclear whether this "golden" livre references the standard livre, or the Louis d'Or (a gold coin then valued at 24 livres). If accurate, using today's values for gold (US$600 per ounce, 2006) and silver (US$12 per ounce, 2006), the value of the Versailles estate soars to a staggering US$300 billion. Another way to look at this controversy over the costs of Versailles, is to consider the benefits that France drew from this royal palace. Versailles, by locking the nobles into a golden cage, effectively ended the periodical aristocratic groups and rebellions that had plagued France for centuries. It also destroyed aristocratic power in the provinces, and enabled a centralization of the state, for which a majority of modern Frenchmen are still thankful to Louis XIV, although French centralization, as further developed during the French Revolution, and later the Third Republic, is currently the subject of much debate and overhauling. Versailles also had a tremendous influence on French architecture and arts, and indeed on European architecture and arts, as the court tastes and culture elaborated in Versailles influenced most of Europe. From the start, Versailles was conceived as much as a showcase of French arts and craftsmanship organized in the royal workshops of the Gobelins manufactory, as a home for a king or a monument to absolutism. Modern Frenchmen, even the least sympathetic to the former monarchy, are still generally quite proud of the lasting influence that French arts developed in Versailles have had in the world.[citation needed]

War uses

Proclamation of the German Empire by Anton von Werner

After the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, with the Siege of Paris dragging on, the palace was the main headquarters of the Prussian army from 5 October 1870 until 13 March 1871. On 18 January 1871, Prussian King Wilhelm I was proclaimed German Emperor in the Hall of Mirrors, and the German Empire was founded.

After First World War, it hosted the opening of the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, also on 18 January. Germany was blamed for causing the First World War in the Treaty of Versailles which had to be signed in the same room on 28 June 1919.

The ravages of war and neglect over the centuries left their mark on the palace and its huge park. Modern French governments of the post-World War II era have sought to repair these damages. They have on the whole been successful, but some of the more costly items, such as the vast array of fountains, have yet to be put back completely in service. As spectacular as they might seem now, they were even more extensive in the 18th century. The 18th-century waterworks at Marly— the machine de Marly that fed the fountains— was probably the biggest mechanical system of its time. The water came in from afar on monumental stone aqueducts, which have long ago fallen in disrepair or been torn down. Some aqueducts were never completed for want of resources or due to the exigencies of war. The search for sufficient supplies of water was in fact never fully realised even during the apogee of Versailles' glory as the seat of government, as the fountains could not be operated together satisfactorily for any significant periods of time.

Post-royal: the monument-museum

After the Revolution the paintings and sculpture, like the crown jewels, were consigned to the new Musée du Louvre as part of the cultural patrimony of France. Other contents went to serve a new and moral public role: books and medals went to the Bibliothèque Nationale, clocks and scientific instruments (Louis XVI was a connoisseur of science) to the École des Arts et Métiers. Versailles was still the most richly-appointed royal palace of Europe until a long series of auction sales took place on the premises, which unrolled for months during the Revolution, emptying Versailles slowly of every shred of amenity, at derisory prices, mostly to professional brocanteurs. The immediate purpose was to raise desperately-needed funds for the armies of the people, but the long-range strategy was to ensure that there was no Versailles for any king ever to come back to. The strategy worked. Though Versailles was declared an imperial palace, Napoleon never spent a summer's night there.

Versailles remained both royal and unused through the Restoration. In 1830, the politic Louis Philippe, the "Citizen King" declared the château a museum dedicated to "all the glories of France," raising it for the first time above a Bourbon dynastic monument. At the same time, boiseries from the private apartments of princes and courtiers were removed and found their way, without provenance, into the incipient art market in Paris and London for such panelling. What remained were 120 rooms, the modern "Galeries Historiques".[3] The curator Pierre de Nohlac began the conservation of the palace in the 1880s, but did not have the necessary funding until John D. Rockefeller's gift of 60 million francs in 1924-1936. Its promotion as a tourist site started in the 1930s and accelerated in the 1950s and 1960s.[43]

In the 1960s, Pierre Verlet, the greatest writer on the history of French furniture managed to get some royal furnishings returned from the museums and ministries and ambassadors' residences where they had become scattered from the central warehouses of the Mobilier National. He conceived the bold scheme of refurnishing Versailles, and the refurnished royal Appartements that tourists view today are due to Verlet's successful initiative, in which textiles were even rewoven to refurbish the state beds.

Buildings inspired by Versailles

Würzburg Residenz: garden front
Fountain and Facade at Powerscourt

As the centralizing organization of modern national government formulated by Richelieu was perfected by Louis XIV and his advisors, other European states hastened to copy it. As they followed the French model in administration and particularly in military affairs (which is why some American government and military vocabulary, such as bureau, personnel, and materiel, are still French), most princes had to construct new buildings to house the new bureaucracies. Because government in those days was still centered on the household of the prince, Versailles ignited a competitive spate of building palaces in fountain-filled gardens among the power elite of Europe.

Ironically, the most direct homage to Versailles came when the age of feudal governments ended at the end of the nineteenth century. Ludwig II of Bavaria, a constitutional monarch, further constrained by doctors because of his incipient insanity, commissioned a nearly identical copy of Versailles, Herrenchiemsee, to be built on an island on the bucolic Chiemsee lake in the countryside of Bavaria. His funds ran out too soon, but the central portion was finished, along with its own hall of mirrors, and formal French gardens were planted around it.

But during the Baroque period the great palaces and their dependencies housed working governments. When Peter I of Russia structured a new, Western-style government for Russia, he visited Versailles in a "Grand Embassy" and later decided to build a residence in the outskirts of Saint Petersburg. He had the Peterhof complex of buildings, gardens, and parks built.

Efforts in England, where power during the period centered on Parliament and particularly on politically powerful nobles rather than on the monarchy, were limited. They included renovations at Hampton Court, and the all-but-royal Chatsworth. The direct British answer to Versailles is Blenheim Palace, built as a national monument for Louis' nemesis, the Duke of Marlborough.

In the courts of Germany, several Versailles-like palaces were constructed, including Schloss Wilhelmshöhe at Kassel, Schloss Augustusburg in Brühl, Ludwigsburg, Schloss Schleissheim and the Residenz in Würzburg. Many others still stand, tiny and often exquisite little palaces that once ruled their postage-stamp principalities.

In Sweden, there is Drottningholm; in Austria Schönbrunn, and in Hungary Eszterháza, the administrative center of the vast estates of a princely family rather than that of a monarch.

In Italy, there are Caserta Palace, the Ducal Palace of Colorno and the Palazzina di Stupinigi.

In the Iberian peninsula two competitors for Versailles stand out: La Granja near Madrid, and Queluz in Portugal.

In Kapurthala, Punjab, India the famous Jagatjit Palace is also based on this building made by the last Maharajah of the princly state of Kapurthala and designed by a French architect M. Marcel.

Poland, with an elected king having less power than monarchs of other countries, had few opportunities for royal construction, and really nothing along the lines of Versailles was possible. However, the last king of Poland did construct Łazienki, essentially an exceptionally large pavilion like those built by French courtiers as weekend residences away from Versailles. The most developed baroque palace complex there, the Branicki Palace in Białystok, was built by a powerful noble.

In Ireland Mervyn Wingfield, 7th Viscount Powerscourt took inspiration from the Palace when building the Powerscourt House in Enniskerry in Co. Wicklow.

Musical Events

On record, Versailles has held two musical events.

In 1988 on June 21 and 22nd, its courtyard played host to Pink Floyd during their "A Momentary Lapse of Reason" European Tour which was filmed. "The Great Gig in the Sky" footage from the show was used on the "Delicate Sound Of Thunder" DVD.

On July 2 2005, the French Live 8 was held in the courtyard.

The Palace in pop culture

An Adventure

One of the more curious aspect of Versailles in popular culture occurred at the turn of the 20th century. On 10 August 1901, Elanor Jourdain and Charlotte Anne Moberly, tourists from England, visited Versailles. After touring the chateau and the gardens, they decided to visit the Petit Trianon. Neither had anymore knowledge of Versailles than the information provided in their Baedeker guide. Finding the route to the Petit Trianon, the two proceeded there. As they approached the area, they were bet by numerous people wearing clothing that the two women believed to be costumes. Upon entering the gardens and as they neared the house, they met still more “costumed” people, including a priest, who warned them away from the house before disappearing into the chapel, a group of soldiers in green uniforms, and a woman with light-red hair dressed in a white muslin dress and wide-brim hat, who was sitting on the terrace of the house sketching. The two visitors continued their tour around the house and noted the gardens to the west of the house before they left.

The next day, curious about the costumed people around the Petit Trianon, the two returned to Versailles. Immediately upon their arrival at the Petit Trianon they noticed changes: a passageway between service buildings south of the house had disappeared; a mature bush below the south-west corner of the terrace had appeared; and the garden to the west of the house had changed – a small kiosk that was there the day before was no longer to be seen.

The two women began making inquiries in order to learn about the changes. Their first thought was that they had interrupted a film being made in the gardens, which ostensibly would have explained the “costumed” people. They were to learn, however, that no film company had been at the Petit Trianon. They continued their investigation.

They met with a military historian at the Invalides and described in detail the green uniforms they had seen at the Petit Trianon. After some research, the historian determined that the uniforms described were those belonging to the Lifeguard Regiment of the comte d’Artois. The historian further revealed that the comte d’Artois gave his lifeguards to serve as a bodyguard for his sister-in-law, Marie-Antoinette, at the Petit Trianon.

Further investigation revealed that music heard on that August afternoon was incidental music common during the late 18th century. The mature bush was explained as it had been planted by queen Marie-Amélie in the 1830s. The most perplexing aspect, however, to that afternoon were the changes in the gardens to the west of the house.

The gardens that the women described resembled none of the know historical documents related to Richard Mique’s designs for the gardens at the Petit Trianon: no historical evidence proved – or even suggested – the existence of a kiosk in the part of the gardens as described by Elanor Jourdain and Charlotte Anne Moberly. Several years after this event, during the restoration of a house in which Mique had lived while he was designing the gardens at the Petit Trianon, a hitherto unknown plan of the gardens west of the house was discovered. The unknown plan indicated a kiosk precisely in the position that Jourdain and Moberly had described.[44]

Source

Jourdain, Elanor and Charlotte Anne Moberly, An Adventure. (London, 1911).


The Palace is featured in Si Versailles m'était conté, a film by Sacha Guitry (1954)[45] [46] that recounts a history of the Palace from the perspectives of its inhabitants. The film fetures a large cast of French and international stars, including Édith Piaf singing the revolutionary song "Ça Ira" as a mob storms the gates to remove Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette.

The Palace of Versailles was used as an area in the Sega Genesis video game Castlevania: Bloodlines, especially the Hall of Mirrors.

In 2006, the French Government gave permission to American director Sofia Coppola to film her movie, Marie Antoinette, in the Palace of Versailles. This included the Hall of Mirrors for the wedding ball scenes, even though it was being renovated at the time.

Singer-songwriter Al Stewart released a song entitled "The Palace of Versailles", a song detailing the French Revolution, The Terror, and the military coup of Napoleon Bonaparte, from the perspective of "the lonely Palace of Versailles".

Rapper Jay-Z refers to the Hall of Mirrors in the song titled "Sweet," from his album American Gangster. "I can walk down the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles, and be so satisfied when I look myself in the eyes."

See also

Notes

  1. ^ During the reign of Louis XIV (until 1689), a solid silver throne stood on a Persian carpet covered dais on the south wall of this room.
  2. ^ This room originally served as the west landing of the Ambassadors’ Staircase and formed the main entrance to the grand appartement du roi.
  3. ^ Baillie, Hugh Murray. "Etiquette and the Planning of State Apartments in Baroque Palaces," Archeologia CI (1967): 169-199.
  4. ^ and with the apartment’s northern exposure, Louis XIV found the rooms too cold and opted to live in the rooms previously occupied by his father.
  5. ^ André Félibien, Description sommaire du chasteau de Versailles, (Paris, 1674).
  6. ^ Located in the western cove of the salon d’Apollon and painted by Charles de LaFosse ca. 1674.
  7. ^ Located in the southern cove of the ceiling of the salon de Mercure and painted by Jean-Baptiste de Champaigne ca. 1674.
  8. ^ For a more detailed discussion regarding the ceiling decor of the grand appartement du roi, see Gérard Sabatier, “Versailles, ou la figure du roi,” (Paris: Albin Michel, 1999). For an analysis of the symbolism in the decor of the grand appartement du roi, see Edward Lighthart, “Archétype et symbole dans le style Louis XIV versaillais: réflexions sur l’imago rex et l’imago patriae au début de l’époque moderne,” (Doctoral thesis, 1997).
  9. ^ Originally, the room that is known today as the salon de Vénus formed part of the apartment of the king’s mistress, Madame de Montespan. Owing to her involvement with Affair of the Poisons, during which time its was alleged she had been giving the king love potions, she fell from grace in 1678 and her apartments were taken over by Louis XIV at which time the new salon de Vénus was installed.
  10. ^ This chapel was the second of chapels built in the château of Versailles
  11. ^ Owing to the construction of the Hall of Mirrors — the central project of Louis XIV’s 3rd building campaign — and the death of Marie-Thérèse in 1683, the grand cabinet, the oratory, and the petit cabinet were destroyed for the construction of the Hall of Mirrors and the Salon de la paix. Of these three rooms, only fragments of the ceiling decoration of the Grand cabinet have survived; no evidence regarding the decoration of the oratory or the petit cabinet has been found. See Nicole Reynaud and Jacques Villain, “Fragments retrouvés de la décoration du Grand Appartement de la Reine Marie-Thérèse,” Revue du Louvre, #4-5 (1970): 231-238.
  12. ^ On an interesting note, not only were women depicted in the decoration of the grand appartement de la reine, but women contributed to the decoration of these rooms. Most notable of these ladies would be Madeleine de Boulogne, who painted the over-door painting in the salle des gardes.
  13. ^ With the creation of this room, a new chapel — the château’s third — was built in the adjacent room to the east. In 1682, when the third chapel was built (where the salon d’Hercule is now located), this room was renamed la grande salle des gardes de la reine. In the 19th century, this room was rebaptized salle du sacre owing to the installation of Jean-Louis David’s Coronation of Napoléon I.
  14. ^ The decoration of this room was an important expression in French interior design. It heralded the transition from the Regency style, which prevailed from the death of Louis XIV through to 1732(with the decoration of the Salon de la princesse at the Hôtel de Soubise), and the Rococo (or style Louis XV), the style that prevailed for the greater part of the reign of Louis XV.
  15. ^ It was via this room that the Paris mob, which stormed the château during the night of 6/7 October 1789, gained access to the château. During the mêlée, members of the garde Suisse, which formed part the queen’s bodyguard, were killed in their attempts to protect the queen.
  16. ^ The petite galerie and its two salons were originally part of the apartment of the king’s mistress, Mme de Montespan. When she fell from grace, the king occupied part of her former rooms. The decoration of the petite gallerie and the two salons was executed by Charles LeBrun’s archrival, Pierre Mignard.
  17. ^ It is worth noting that all of the painting in the royal collection by Leonardo da Vinci were kept in this apartment — including the Jaconde or the Mona Lisa. (From: Madeleine de Scudéry, Correspondence.)
  18. ^ In constructing and decorating the cabinet des chiens and salle à manger des retours de chasses, Louis XV instructed his architect to use the paneling and other decorative elements from Louis XIV’s cabinet du billard.
  19. ^ In 1764, the young Mozart performed a harpsichord concert for the royal family.
  20. ^ which are also known as les petits cabinets de la reine and l'appartement intérieur de la reine
  21. ^ Contrary to common belief, Marie-Antoinette was well read — a quality that her mother, the Empress Maria Theresa, insisted all her daughters cultivate.
  22. ^ The term “toilette à l’anglaise” refers to a flush toilet, similar to today’s modern convenience.
  23. ^ Books containing drawings of the queen’s dresses and other garments would be presented to Marie-Antoinette. She would indicate her preference by inserting a pin into the page that depicted the dress she wanted to wear.
  24. ^ The only other option would be to cross the public rooms, which were always crowded with people.
  25. ^ This entailed the suppression of the salon de Jupiter, the salon de Saturn, and the salon de Vénus from both the king and queen’s state apartments,
  26. ^ The Gobelins, which still exist today, was nationalized in the 1660s by Colbert for the express purpose of making furniture and other decorative items for Versailles and other royal residences. According to legend, in order to keep its monopoly, the government of the Venetian Republic sent agents to France to poison the workers whom Colbert had brought to France.
  27. ^ This was the manner in which one was able to obtain a much sought-after invitation to one of the king’s house parties at Marly-le-Roi, the villa Louis XIV built north of Versailles on the route to Saint-Germain-en-laye.
  28. ^ was widely used in France. Sainte-Chapelle in Paris is a prototypical example; all successive chapels at Versailles followed the palatine model
  29. ^ When the 4th chapel was constructed, the salon de l’Abondance, which had served as entry to the petit appartement du roi, was transformed into the vestibule of the royal tribune — so named as it was from this upper level that the royal family heard daily mass.
  30. ^ and was witness to most of the baptisms and weddings of members of the court and royal family during the reign of Louis XIV. Today the salon d’Hercule and the lower vestibule occupy the space of this site.
  31. ^ . The bas-relief sculpture in this entrance room, "Louis XIV Crossing the Rhine", was sculpted by Nicolas et Guillaume Coustou and was originally intended to decorate the salon de la Guerre.
  32. ^ . Owing to the financial burdens that Louis XIV faced at the end of his reign, the theater alas could not be realised during his reign.
  33. ^ On 1 October 1789, the gardes du corps du roi held a banquet to welcome the Flanders Regiment, which had just arrived to strengthen protection for the royal family against the revolutionary rumblings that were being heard in Paris. At this banquet, Louis XVI, Marie-Antoinette, and the dauphin received the pledge of loyalty from these guards when they ripped off the blue-white-red cockades they had been wearing and replaced them with white ones — the color that symbolized the Bourbon monarchy. This was the last event held in the Opéra during the Ancien Régime.
  34. ^ Today, when the Assemblée nationale and the Sénat meet in joint session, they do so at Versailles, not in Paris. On these occasions, Versailles becomes the de-facto capital of France. To accommodate the members of the Sénat, the north wing of the château, in the part that faces the city of Versailles, over 300 apartments have been arranged for the private use by members of the upper house of France’s parliament.
  35. ^ The salon frais was also equipped with fountains that could be operated secretly and which would splash unsuspecting visitors with icy water.
  36. ^ Parts of the Trianon de Porcelaine – especially the smaller pavilions – were incorporated into the newer building.
  37. ^ The term “Grand Trianon” came into usage in the 18th century to distinguish it from the Petit Trianon. The Grand Trianon is also known as the Marble Trianon, owing to the material of its construction.
  38. ^ The second floor is concealed by the roof balustrade.
  39. ^ In Louis XIV’s time, the upper garden (south of the Galerie and west of the Colonnade) was transformed into a greenhouse for the winter months. At other times of the year, it was not uncommon for the color scheme of the upper garden to be changed on a daily basis. The greenhouses that served this objective were located in the outer reaches of the park that surrounded the Grand Trianon.
  40. ^ For the relation of the imagery of the Grand Trianon and Versailles, see Edward Lighthart, “Archétype et symbole dans le style Louis XIV versaillais: réflexions sur l’imago rex et l’imago patriae au début de l’époque moderne,” (Doctoral thesis, 1997).
  41. ^ One of the errors committed during the early 19th century was when Louis-Philippe ordered the Colonnade to be enclosed with glass. This egregious statement was removed in the late 19th century.
  42. ^ Similar expressions built in response to Rousseau’s philosophy were known throughout Europe. The Hameau de la reine is far from a unique example.
  43. ^ Fabien Oppermann, "Images et usages du château de Versailles au XXe siècle", thesis, Ecole des Chartes, 2004.[1]
  44. ^ For a detailed explanation of this event, see: Edward Lighthart “10 August 1901/1792, a case of causal synchronicity.”
  45. ^ See www.imdb.com
  46. ^ See http://www.filmsdefrance.com/FDF_Si_Versailles_m_etait_conte_rev.html

Further reading

  • Thompson, Ian. The Sun King's Garden: Louis XIV, André Le Nôtre And the Creation of the Gardens of Versailles. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 1-58234-631-3).

Refrences

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