From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Château de Madrid in an 18th century
engraving by Jacques Rigaud.
The Château de Madrid was a Renaissance building in
France. It was built in Neuilly, on
the edge of the Bois de Boulogne, near Paris, in the early 1500s, but fell
into disuse in the 17th and 18th centuries and was almost
completely demolished in the 1790s.
The construction of the château was ordered by Francis I
of France in 1527, who had been captured at the Battle of Pavia
in 1525 and held for some months in Madrid. On his return to France
in 1526, Francis found the Louvre uncomfortable, and he desired a new
palace. Initially called the Château de Boulogne, the new building
quickly became known as the Château de Madrid, taking its name from
the Casa de
Campo, the destroyed country house of
Licenciado Vargas in Madrid. Both buildings were constructed on the
edge of a forest near a large city, and both were made up of a long
central corps
de logis with loggias
on two storeys and a cubical pavilion at each end.
The construction work was at first directed by Florentine Girolamo della Robbia and later
by French architects. The building was completed during the reign
of Henry
II of France, about 1552.
The Château de Madrid was richly decorated, inside and out.
Almost all of the exterior walls were covered in majolica and high
relief; as a result it was also nicknamed the "Château de Faïence", the latter word describing
earthenware decorated with colorful opaque glazes. Its architecture
bore clear influences from both Renaissance Italy, in that its building plan resembled the
letter H and that its exterior was
richly ornamented, and France, because of the towers on each corner
of both pavilions and its internal layout, based on the Châteaux of
Chenonceaux
and Chambord. This form that was
repeated again at La Muette and Challeau.
During the Regency
of Louis
XV of France, Marie Louise Élisabeth
d'Orléans, (the daughter of the Regent) lived at the castle.
The château was abandoned by the House of Bourbon after her death. In
1787, an arrêt du Conseil of Louis XVI
of France ordered it to be sold with a view to demolition,
together with the Château de la Muette, the Château de Vincennes and the Château de
Blois. The building was in ruins before the French
Revolution, after which it was bought on 27 March 1792 by M.
Leroy, a demolition contractor, who paid with assignat banknotes
issued by the Revolutionary government. Few traces have survived:
one stone capital and three faience fragments are held by
the museums of Sevres and Écouen. The site has been built upon
subsequently and the foundations destroyed.
References
Further
reading
- Monique Châtenet, Le château de Madrid au bois de
Boulogne, Paris, Éditions Picard, Collection De Architectura,
1987 – ISBN 2708403362 (French)
- Alberto Faliva, Giuseppe Dattaro et le petit palais de
Marmirolo, Francesco Dattaro et le château de Madrid : étude
des relations Franco-italiennes autour de 1530-1550.,
dissertation CESR Tours, 2004
- Alberto Faliva, Francesco e Giuseppe Dattaro. La palazzina
del Bosco e altre opere, Cremona, 2003
- Alberto Faliva, Alain Erlande Brandenburg, Robert J. Knecht, Richard Ingersoll, Aurora
Scotti Tosini, David Ekserdjian, Renaissance Franco-Italienne.
Serlio, Du Cerceau et les Dattaro, Cremona, 2005
- Alberto Faliva, Sebastiano Serlio e l'Ordine Composito dei
Romani Antichi, Bollettino Ingegneri, Firenze, numero 12, 2006
- Alberto Faliva, Jacopo Sansovino e altri dodici casi. Un altro
medioevo (questa volta rinascimentale), Bollettino Ingegneri,
Firenze, numero 11, 2007
External
links