The Château de Chenonceau is a French château near the small village of Chenonceaux, in the Indre-et-Loire département of the Loire Valley in France.
The château was built on the site of an old mill on the River Cher, sometime before its first mention in writing in the 11th century. It was designed by the French Renaissance architect Philibert de l'Orme.
The original château was torched in 1412 to punish owner Jean Marques for an act of sedition. He rebuilt a château and fortified mill on the site in the 1430s. Subsequently, his indebted heir Pierre Marques sold the castle to Thomas Bohier (fr) Chamberlain for King Charles VIII of France in 1513. Bohier destroyed the castle, though its 15th-century keep was left standing, and built an entirely new residence between 1515 and 1521. The work was sometimes overseen by his wife Katherine Briçonnet, who delighted in hosting French nobility, including King Francis I on two occasions.
In 1535 the château was seized from Bohier's son by King Francis I of France for unpaid debts to the Crown; after Francis' death in 1547, Henry II offered the château as a gift to his mistress, Diane de Poitiers, who became fervently attached to the château along the river. In 1555 she commissioned Philibert de l'Orme to build the arched bridge joining the château to its opposite bank. Diane then oversaw the planting of extensive flower and vegetable gardens along with a variety of fruit trees. Set along the banks of the river, but buttressed from flooding by stone terraces, the exquisite gardens were laid out in four triangles.
Diane de Poitiers was the unquestioned mistress of the castle, but ownership remained with the crown until 1555, when years of delicate legal maneuvers finally yielded possession to her. However, after King Henry II died in 1559, his strong-willed widow and regent Catherine de' Medici forced Diane to exchange it for the Château Chaumont. Queen Catherine then made Chenonceau her own favorite residence, adding a new series of gardens.
As Regent of
On Catherine's death in 1589 the château
went to her daughter-in-law, Louise de Lorraine-Vaudémont, wife of King Henry III. At Chenonceau Louise was told
of her husband's assassination in 1589 and she fell into a state of depression,
spending the remainder of her days wandering aimlessly along the château's
corridors dressed in mourning clothes amidst somber black tapestries
stitched with skulls and crossbones.
After that, it was owned by Louise's
heir César of Vendôme and his
wife, Françoise of Lorraine, Duchess of Vendôme, and passed quietly down the Valois line of inheritance, alternately inhabited and
abandoned for more than a hundred years.
Château de Chenonceau was bought by the Duke of Bourbon in 1720. Little by little,
he sold off all of the castle's contents. Many of the fine statues ended up at Versailles. The estate itself was finally
sold for 130,000 livres in 1733 to a wealthy squire named Claude Dupin (fr).
Claude's wife (daughter of financier
Samuel Bernard and grandmother of George Sand),
Madame Louise Dupin (fr),
brought life back to the castle by entertaining the leaders of The
Enlightenment: Voltaire, Montesquieu, Buffon, Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle,
Pierre de Marivaux, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. She saved the
château from destruction during the French Revolution, preserving it from being
destroyed by the Revolutionary Guard because it was essential to travel and
commerce, being the only bridge across the river for many miles. She is said to
be the one who changed the spelling of the Château (from Chenonceaux to
Chenonceau) to please the villagers during the French
Revolution. She dropped the "x" at the end of the
Château's name to differentiate what was a symbol of royalty from the Republic.
Although no official sources have been found to support this legend, the
Château has been since referred to and accepted as Chenonceau.
In 1864, Daniel Wilson, a Scotsman who
had made a fortune installing gaslights throughout Paris , bought the château for his daughter.
In the tradition of Catherine de' Medici, she would spend a fortune on
elaborate parties to such an extent that her finances were depleted and the
château was seized and sold to José-Emilio Terry, a Cuban millionaire, in 1891.
Terry sold it in 1896 to a family member, Francisco Terry, and in 1913, the Menier family,
famous for their chocolates, bought the château and still
own it to this day.
During World War I the gallery was used
as a hospital ward; during the Second War
it was a means of escaping from the Nazi occupied
zone on one side of the River Cher to the "free" zone on the opposite
bank.
In 1951, the Menier family entrusted the
château's restoration to Bernard Voisin, who
brought the dilapidated structure and the gardens (ravaged in the Cher River
flood in 1940) back to a reflection of its former glory.
An architectural mixture of late Gothic and early Renaissance, Château de Chenonceau and its
gardens are open to the public. Other than the Royal Palace of Versailles, Chenonceau is the
most visited château in France .
The château is classified as a Monument historique since 1840 by the French Ministry of Culture. Today,
Chenonceau is a major tourist attraction and in 2007 received around
800,000 visitors.
(source wikipedia)
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