Acquisition by Guillaume Goudet 1390 (≈ 1390)
First bourgeois owner of the estate.
1799
Purchase by Josephine de Beauharnais
Purchase by Josephine de Beauharnais 1799 (≈ 1799)
Becomes a private residence of Napoleon and Josephine.
1809
Divorce of Napoleon and Josephine
Divorce of Napoleon and Josephine 1809 (≈ 1809)
Josephine retains Malmaison as her principal residence.
1814
Death of Josephine
Death of Josephine 1814 (≈ 1814)
End of the golden age of the estate.
1870
Sacking by the Prussian Army
Sacking by the Prussian Army 1870 (≈ 1870)
Major damage during the Franco-Prussian war.
1904
State legation by Osiris
State legation by Osiris 1904 (≈ 1904)
The castle became a national museum in 1906.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Joséphine de Beauharnais - Owner and patron
Turn Malmaison into an exceptional botanical estate.
Napoléon Bonaparte - Co-owner and Emperor
Resided there during the Consulate.
Charles Percier et Pierre Fontaine - Architects
Renovated the castle under the Consulate.
Pierre-Joseph Redouté - Botanist painter
Illustrate the roses of the rose garden.
Daniel Iffla (Osiris) - Patron and restorer
Offered the castle to the state in 1904.
Pierre Humbert - Architect restorer
Redonna at the castle its original appearance.
Origin and history
The castle of Malmaison, located in Rueil-Malmaison in the Hauts-de-Seine, is mentioned in the Middle Ages as a fief with a mansion. In the 15th century, he passed into the hands of Parisian bourgeois families, including the Goudet, the Dubois and the Dauvergne, before being acquired in 1390 by Guillaume Goudet, a Parisian merchant. In the 17th century, Christophe Perrot, an adviser to the Paris Parliament, began the construction of a new castle, composed of a body of houses flanked by pavilions. The estate is then passed on to the Barentin, who make architectural changes, such as adding mansard wing.
In 1799, Josephine de Beauharnais, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, bought the castle for 325,000 francs. After the coup d'état of the 18 Brumaire, Napoleon became co-owner and entrusted his renovation to the architects Percier and Fontaine. The castle became a central place of power during the Consulate, before Napoleon favoured Saint-Cloud. Josephine, after her divorce in 1809, made it her main residence and developed an exceptional garden, populated by exotic plants and rare animals, with the help of gardeners like Thomas Blaikie and André Dupont.
Malmaison Park, built in the English style, houses a legendary rose garden of 250 varieties, documented by Pierre-Joseph Redouté. Josephine introduced plant and animal species from all over the world, thanks in particular to the scientific expeditions commissioned by Napoleon. After his death in 1814, the estate was dispersed, then restored in the nineteenth century by patron Daniel Iffla (Osiris), who left it to the state in 1904. Since 1906, the castle has been a national museum dedicated to Napoleonic history, classified as a historical monument.
The castle suffered degradation during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, before being restored by architect Pierre Humbert. The museum's collections include consular art objects, period furniture, and testimonies of Josephine and Napoleon's life. The estate, reduced to 6 hectares, preserves part of its historic park, labeled "remarkable garden". The Château de Bois-Préau, an annex to the museum, houses collections dedicated to Saint Helena and the return of Napoleon's ashes in 1840.
The front of the castle, on the park side, is decorated with statues and vases from Marly's gardens, while marble obelisks, once gilded, mark the entrance. The interior, restored to regain its appearance under the Consulate, includes emblematic pieces such as the Council Chamber, decorated in the shape of a military tent, and the library. Today the museum presents a homogeneous set of furniture and art objects of the First Empire, offering a unique testimony of this period.
Ouverture annuelle : ouvert tous les jours sauf le mardi.
Basse saison : Du 1er octobre au 31 mars : En semaine de 10h00 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 17h15 Le samedi et dimanche de 10h00 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 17h45
Haute saison : Du 1er avril au 30 septembre : En semaine de 10h00 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 17h45 Le samedi et dimanche de 10h00 à 12h30 et de 13h30 à 18h15