From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A rural château in France.
- For other senses of this word, see château
(disambiguation).
A château (plural châteaux;
French pronunciation: [ʃato] for
both the singular and the plural) is a manor house or
residence of the lord of the manor
or a country house of nobility or gentry, with or without fortifications,
originally—and still most frequently—in French-speaking regions. Where
clarification is needed, a fortified château (that is, a castle) is called a château
fort, such as Château fort de Roquetaillade.
Care should be taken when translating the word château into English. It
is not used in the same way as "castle", and most châteaux are
described in English as "palaces" or "country houses"
rather than "castles". For example, the Château
de Versailles is so called because it was located in the
countryside when it was built, but it does not bear any resemblance
to a castle, so it is usually known in English as the Palace of
Versailles.
The urban
counterpart of château is palais, which in French is applied only to
grand houses in a city. This usage is again different from that of
the term "palace" in English, where there is no requirement that a
palace must be in a city, but the word is rarely used for buildings
other than the grandest royal residences. The expression hôtel
particulier is used for an urban "private house" of a
grand sort.
Concept
If a château is not old, then it must be grand. A château is a
“power house”, as Sir John Summerson dubbed the English and
Georgian Irish “stately homes” that are Britain's
architectural counterparts to French châteaux. It is the personal
(and usually hereditary) badge of a family that, with some
official rank, locally represents the royal authority; thus, the
word château often refers to the dwelling of a member of
either the French royalty or the nobility, but some fine châteaux,
such as Vaux-le-Vicomte, were built by the
essentially high-bourgeois — people but recently ennobled:
tax-farmers and ministers of Louis
XIII and his royal successors.
A château is supported by its terres (lands), composing
a demesne that
renders the society of the château largely self-sufficient, in the
manner of the historic Roman and Early Mediæval villa system, (cf. manorialism, hacienda). The open villas of Rome in the
times of Pliny
the Elder, Maecenas, and Emperor Tiberius began to be walled-in, and then
fortified in the 3rd century AD, thus evolving to
castellar “châteaux”. In modern usage, a château retains
some enclosures that are distant descendants of these fortifying
outworks: a fenced, gated, closeable forecourt, perhaps a gatehouse or a keeper's
lodge, and supporting outbuildings (stables, kitchens, breweries,
bakeries, manservant quarters in the garçonnière). Besides
the cour d’honneur (court of honour) entrance, the château
might have an inner cour (“court”), and inside, in the
private residence, the château faces a simply and discreetly
enclosed park.
In the city of Paris, the original châteaux that were the Louvre (fortified) and the Luxembourg
(originally suburban) lost their château etymology, becoming
“palaces” when the City enclosed them. In the U.S., the word
château took root selectively, in the Gilded Age resort town of
Newport, Rhode Island, the
châteaux were called “cottages”, but, north of Wilmington, Delaware, in the rich,
rural “Château Country” centred upon the powerful Du Pont family,
château is used with its original definition. In Canada,
especially in English, château usually denotes a hotel,
not a house, and applies only to the largest, most elaborate
railway hotels built in the Canadian Railroad golden age, such
as the Château Lake
Louise, in Lake Louise, Alberta, the Château
Laurier, in Ottawa, Ontario, the Château
Montebello, in Montebello, Quebec, and the
most-famous Château Frontenac, in Quebec City. Moreover,
in other French-speaking European regions, such as Wallonia (Belgium), the word Château is used with the
same definition. In Belgium, a strong French architectural
influence is evident in the seventeenth-century Château des
Comtes de Marchin and the eighteenth-century Château de
Seneffe.
French
Châteaux
Loire
Valley
The Loire
Valley (Vallée de la Loire) is home to more than 300
châteaux. They were built between the 10th and 20th centuries,
firstly by the French kings followed soon thereafter by the
nobility; hence, the Valley is termed "The Valley of the
Kings". Alternatively, due to its moderate climate, wine
growing soils and rich agricultural land, the Loire Valley is
referred to as "The Garden of France". The châteaux range
from the very large (often now in public hands) to more
'human-scale' châteaux such as the Château de Beaulieu in Saumur which is built of the
local tuffeau stone.
Vaux-le-Vicomte
The Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte is simililary a baroque
French chateau located in Maincy, near Melun, 55 km southeast of Paris in
the Seine-et-Marne département of France. It
was built from 1658 to 1661 for Nicolas Fouquet, Marquis de Belle-Isle
(Belle-Ile-en-Mer), Viscount of Melun and Vaux, the superintendent
of finances of Louis XIV.
Dampierre-en-Yvelines
Built by Jules
Hardouin-Mansart, 1675-1683 for the
duc de Chevreuse, Colbert's son-in-law, is a French Baroque château of manageable size.
Protected behind fine wrought iron double gates, the main block and
its outbuildings (corps de logis), linked by balustrades,
are ranged symmetrically around a dry paved and gravelled cour
d'honneur. Behind, the central axis is extended between the
former parterres, now mown
hay. The park with formally shaped water was laid out by André Le Notre. There are sumptuous
interiors. The small scale (compared to Vaux-le-Vicomte for example) makes it
easier to compare it to the approximately contemporary Het Loo,
for William III of Orange. These really are
"Mansart roofs."
Bordeaux
There are many estates with true châteaux on them in Bordeaux, but it is customary
for any wine-producing estate, no
matter how humble, to prefix its name with "Château". This is true
whether the building itself is a magnificent palace or a shack. If
there were any trace of doubt that the Roman villas of Aquitaine evolved into
fortified self-contained châteaux, the wine-producing châteaux
would dispel it. On the other hand there are many beautiful
châteaux in the Bordeaux region still depicting this Roman villa
style of architecture, an example of this being Château
Lagorce in Haux.
See also
External
links