
The castle of Rambouillet, seen from
the
Jardin à la française.
The
château de Rambouillet is a castle in the town of
Rambouillet
, Yvelines
department, in the Île-de-France
region in northern France
, 50 km
(30 miles) southwest of Paris
. It
is the summer residence of the
Presidents of the French
Republic.
History
The
château was originally a fortified manor
dating back to 1368 and, although amputated of one of its sides at
the time of
Napoleon I, it
still retains its pentagonal
bastioned
footprint. King
Francis I died
there, on 31 March 1547, probably in the imposing medieval tower
that bears his name. Like the
Hôtel de Rambouillet in Paris, the
château was owned by Charles d'Angennes, the
marquis de
Rambouillet during the reign of
Louis XIII. Avenues led directly from
the park of the castle into the adjacent game-rich forest.
More than
200 square kilometres of forest remain, the remnant of the Forest of
Rambouillet
, also known as the Forest of Yveline (Forêt de
l'Yveline).
In 1783, the château became the private property of king
Louis XVI, who bought it from his cousin
the
duc de
Penthièvre as an extension of his hunting grounds. Queen
Marie-Antoinette, who accompanied
her husband on a visit in November 1783, is said to have exclaimed:
"
Comment pourrais-je vivre dans cette gothique
crapaudière!" (How could I live in such a gothic toadhouse!)
However, to induce his wife to like his new acquisition, Louis XVI
commissioned in great secret the construction of the famous
Laiterie de la Reine, (the Queen's
dairy)
, where the buckets were of Sèvres
porcelain
, painted and grained to imitate wood, and the
presiding nymph was a marble Amalthea, with
the goat that nurtured Jupiter, sculpted by Pierre Julien. A little salon was
attached to the dairy itself, with chairs supplied by
Georges Jacob in 1787 that had straight,
tapering stop-fluted legs
During the
French Revolution of
1789, the domain of Rambouillet became
bien national, the castle being
emptied of its furnishings and the gardens and surrounded park
falling into neglect.
During the reign of
Napoleon
I, Rambouillet was included in his
liste civile (list
of government-owned property at the disposal of the head of state).
The emperor came several times to Rambouillet, the last being on
the night of 29–30 June 1815, on his way to exile to
Saint Helena. Among the reminders of Napoléon
are the Pompeian style bathroom with its small bathtub and the
exquisite balcony built to link the emperor's apartment to that of
his second wife, the empress
Marie-Louise. Another
reminder of Napoléon was the splendid
Allée de Cyprès chauves
de Louisiane, a double-lined bald cypress (
Taxodium distichum) avenue.
At the time of the
Bourbon
Restoration, Rambouillet was also included in the royal
liste civile. Fifteen years after Napoleon I,
Charles X's road to exile also started
at Rambouillet. On 2 August 1830, he signed his
abdication here in favour of his son, the
duc
d'Angoulême. Twenty minutes later, the latter signed his
own abdication in favor of his nephew, the nine-year old
duc de Bordeaux.
From 1830 to 1848, the domain of Rambouillet, which had belonged to
his grandfather, the
duc de Penthièvre, was not included
in
Louis-Philippe
I, King of the French's
liste civile; however, the
emperor
Napoléon III, who
reigned from 1852 to 1870, requested its inclusion in his.
After the fall of Napoleon III in 1870, which saw the beginning of
the
French Third Republic, the
domain of Rambouillet was leased from 1870 to 1883 to the
duc de la Trémoille. In February
1896, Rambouillet received a visit from President
Félix Faure who then decided to spend his
summers there with his family. Since then, Rambouillet has become
the summer residence of the Presidents of the Republic, who
entertain, and used to invite to hunting parties many foreign
dignitaries, princes and heads of state. As a part-time residence
of the French president, it is sometimes referred to as the
Palace of Rambouillet.
On 23 August 1944, prior to the liberation of Paris,
General Charles de Gaulle arrived at
Rambouillet and set up his headquarters in the castle where, in the
evening, he met
General
Philippe Leclerc who, at the head of his
French 2nd Armored Division
(
2e Division blindée, more affectionately known in France
as
La Deuxième DB), had mission to liberate Paris. Part of
the French 2nd Armored Division was to leave from Rambouillet at
dawn the following day,
on its march "to capture Paris".
On August 25, around 2 p.m., "both wrought with emotion and filled
with serenity", General de Gaulle left Rambouillet by car to enter
"Paris libérée"
.
In November 1975, the first "
G6" summit
was organized in the château by French President
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing for
the heads of the world's leading industrialized countries.
Attending
were: Gerald Ford (United States
), Harold Wilson
(United
Kingdom
), Aldo Moro (Italy
), Takeo Miki (Japan
) and
Helmut Schmidt (West Germany
).
The
château de Rambouillet continues to be used as a venue for
bilateral summits and, in February 1999, was host to the
negotiations on Kosovo
; see
Kosovo War.
On 26 December 1999,
Hurricane Lothar hit the
northern half of France, wreaking havoc to forests, parks and
buildings.
The Forest of Rambouillet
lost hundreds of thousands of trees, and among the
over five thousand downed trees in the park of Rambouillet, was the
handsome Allée de Cyprès chauves de Louisiane, the bald
cypress avenue planted in 1810.
References
External links
Bibliography
- André Castelot, Charles X, La fin d'un monde,
Librairie Académique Perrin, Paris, 1988.
- Svend Eriksen, 1974. Early Neo-Classicism in France,
Faber & Faber, London, 1974.
- G. Lenotre, Le Château de Rambouillet, six siècles
d'histoire, Calmann-Lévy, Paris, 1930; new publication,
Denoël, Paris, 1984.
- Françoise Winieska, Août 1944, la Libération de
Rambouillet, France, Société Historique et Archéologique de
Rambouillet et de l'Yveline (SHARY), Rambouillet, 1999, ISBN
2-9514047-0-0, English version by author under the title August
1944, the Liberation of Rambouillet, France, published by
SHARY under same cover, ISBN 2-9514047-0-0.