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Château de Wideville (also on Davron municipality) à Crespières dans les Yvelines

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de plaisance
Yvelines

Château de Wideville (also on Davron municipality)

    Route de la Maladrerie
    78121 Crespières
Château de Wideville also on Davron municipality
Château de Wideville
Château de Wideville
Château de Wideville
Château de Wideville
Château de Wideville
Château de Wideville
Crédit photo : not reported - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1580-1584
Initial construction
1584
Chapel decoration
1630
Purchased by Claude de Bullion
1635-1636
Construction of the cave
1977
Historical Monument
1995
Acquisition by Valentino
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Castle, chapel and hermitage; nymphae; park with the seven statues that decorate it (cad. Crespières C 19 to 42; Davron B 93; C 1, 2, 111, 112): Order of 7 February 1977

Key figures

Benoît Milon - Financial Officer of Henry III Commander of the castle (1580-1584).
Jacques Androuet du Cerceau - Architect Inspiration of the plans of the castle.
Claude de Bullion - Superintendent of Finance of Louis XIII Buyer in 1630, renovator of the gardens.
Simon Vouet - Decorative painter Author of the interior frescoes and the cave.
Thomas Francine - Hosting fountains of the king Designer of the cave (1635-1636).
Valentino Garavani - Current Owner Italian Couturier, acquired in 1995.

Origin and history

The Château de Wideville, located in Crespières (Yvelines) in Île-de-France, is built between 1580 and 1584 for Benoît Milon, intendant of finance for Henri III, on the plans inspired by Jacques Androuet du Cerceau. It replaces a medieval mansion whose moat remains and a bastioned terrace. The sober and symmetrical Louis XIII style is characterized by a central house body flanked by two pavilions, in brick and white stone. The interiors, later decorated by Simon Vouet, reflect the splendor of the court under Louis XIII.

In 1630, the estate was acquired by Claude de Bullion, Superintendent of Finance of Louis XIII, who added an artificial cave (1635-1636), designed by Thomas Francine and decorated by Simon Vouet, Jacques Sarrazin and Philippe de Buyster. This nymph, one of the last preserved in France, combines mosaics of shells, stuccos and mythological paintings. The gardens, redesigned by Bullion, incorporate factories and statues now scattered.

In the 18th century, the castle passed into the hands of nobles like the Duke of Uzes, before being restored in the 19th century by the Count of Galard, who modernized the interiors under the direction of architect Clement Parent. In the 20th century, the estate changed several owners, including Baroness Antoinette Léonino (Family Rothschild) and, since 1995, designer Valentino Garavani. Ranked Historic Monument in 1977, it preserves rare elements such as the cave and painted decorations of Vouet.

The architecture of the castle, typical of the "houses of the fields" of Du Cerceau, is distinguished by its symmetry, its pediment windows and its portico of entry inspired by Philibert de l'Orme. The facades, made of brick and Crespières stone, contrast with the richly decorated interiors: fireplaces carved by Mathieu Jacquet, solos painted by Vouet, and a staircase with wooden balustrades. The original chapel, decorated by Toussaint Dubreuil in 1584, disappeared, but seven statues of the nymph, works by Philippe de Buyster, remained in the park.

The name Wideville could go back to a companion of William the Conqueror, Hugues de Wideville, certified in various forms (Udeville, Guideville) from the 14th century. The Wideville family, originally from northern France, would have left its name to this estate after settling in England. The castle, witness to the financial fascists of the Renaissance and French classicism, also illustrates the transformations of aristocratic residences in the 17th and 18th centuries.

In the 20th century, the castle lost some of its furniture, like the triptych of Pagny, sold in 1921 and today at the Philadelphia Museum. Occupied by the Germans during World War II, it was restored after the war before being acquired by personalities such as Jacques Setton (1981) and Valentino. The cave, classified and restored between 1970 and 1976, remains a jewel of the heritage, just like the Louis XV woodwork of the hermitage, built in the eighteenth century.

External links