Origin and history
The Château de Saint-Cloud came into being in the 16th century, when in 1577 Jérôme de Gondi, a Florentine financier who arrived in France with Catherine de Medici, acquired a house in Saint-Cloud offered by the Queen. He built a castle in the shape of "L", bordering a terrace overlooking the Seine. This place becomes a theatre of major historical events, like the assassination of Henry III in 1589 by Jacques Clément, followed by the recognition of Henry IV as king in his walls. After several changes of owners within the Gondi family, the estate was sold in 1655 to Barthélemy Hervart, who expanded and added a great waterfall.
In 1658, the castle was acquired for Philippe d'Orléans, brother of Louis XIV, nicknamed "Monsieur". Under his direction, the estate is in a golden age: Antoine Le Pautre, then Jules Hardouin-Mansart, transforms the castle into a sumptuous residence in the form of a "U", while André Le Nôtre redesigns the gardens into a park of 590 hectares, embellished with fountains, waterfalls and grounds. The Apollo Gallery, decorated by Pierre Mignard, and the lavish festivals organized by Monsieur, like the king's marriage to Marie-Thérèse in 1673, make Saint-Cloud a place of power and pleasure. The castle also houses exceptional art collections, including porcelain and jewellery, exhibited in Monsieur's "small cabinets".
In the 18th century, Saint-Cloud passed into the hands of the Regent, Philippe d'Orléans, who received such personalities as the Tsar Peter I of Russia in 1717. The domain became a place of political debate and receptions, marked by figures like Saint-Simon and John Law. Under Louis XV and Louis XVI, the castle continued to be a royal residence: Marie-Antoinette had Richard Mique transform it in 1787-1788, adding a neoclassical chapel and modernizing the facades. During the Revolution, the castle, which had become a national one, was the scene of the coup d'état of the 18 Brumaire (1799), where Napoleon Bonaparte overturned the Management Board in orangery.
In the 19th century, Napoleon I made it an imperial palace and celebrated his marriage with Marie-Louise of Austria in 1810. The castle then welcomed Louis XVIII, Charles X, and Louis-Philippe, who organized dynastic marriages there. Napoleon III, fascinated by Marie-Antoinette, lived there regularly and declared war on Prussia in 1870. On 13 October of the same year, during the siege of Paris, the castle was set on fire by Prussian troops who had made it their headquarters. The ruins, demolished in 1892, give way to the present park, classified national domain.
The architecture of Saint-Cloud blended Italian and French influences, with sumptuous interior decorations, such as the Apollo gallery or the lounges of Venus and Mercury. The gardens, designed by Le Nôtre, played with perspectives and water games, including the Great Cascade, still visible today. The park, open to the public, preserves the remains of hydraulic and historic aisles. Since 2006, an association for the reconstruction of the castle, whose foundations, partially preserved, could serve as a basis for an ambitious project.
The works of art and architectural elements surviving from the fire have been dispersed: bas-reliefs now adorn the Laeken Palace in Belgium, while pediments have been re-used in Bulgaria or in the Paris region. The estate, managed by the National Monuments Centre, remains a place of memory, evoking both the fascist of royal courts and the upheavals of French history.
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