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The Château de Clagny was a French country house that stood northeast of the Château de Versailles; it was designed by Jules Hardouin-Mansart for Madame de Montespan between 1674 and 1680. Although among the most important of the private residences designed by this great architect, it was demolished in 1769 after years of neglect. Its appearance can only be traced through the engravings made of it, and scattered references in the archives of the Bâtiments du Roi.〔Brought together by Charles Harlay, 1913. ''Le Château de Clagny à Versailles : Restitution - Notices - Iconographiques'' (Versailles: Éditions Artistiques et Scientifiques).〕 ==The Château de Clagny== Louis XIV had bought the estate of Clagny from the ''Hôpital des Incurables'' of Paris in 1665. On 22 May 1674, Colbert’s son submitted to him a plan designed by the young Mansart, who had used his family ties with the great François Mansart of the previous reign to make himself and his talents known at court. By 12 June, work was ordered to be begun at once because Madame de Montespan was anxious to start planting the grounds that very fall. André Le Nôtre designed the layout of the gardens. In August 1675, Madame de Sévigné visited Clagny, which she described to her daughter: :“We have been at Clagny, and what shall I tell you about it? It is a palace of Armida;〔Mme de Sévigné is referring to the phantasmagorical palace conjured by the sorceress Armida to entrap Rinaldo, in Torquato Tasso's ''Gerusalemme liberata''.〕 the building rises ''à vue d’œil'',〔"under one's very eyes".〕 the gardens are already made. You know what Le Nôtre is. He has left standing a little dark wood which is very nice; and next comes a little wood of oranges in great tubs: you can stroll in this wood, which has shady avenues, and there are hedges on both sides cut breast-high, so as to conceal the tubs, and these are full of tuberoses, roses, jasmine, and pinks. This novelty is certainly the prettiest, most surprising and ravishing that one could imagine, and the little wood is greatly liked.” The ''orangerie'' where the "little wood of oranges" wintered at Clagny was a showpiece itself, paved with marble. In the gardens ''cabinets de verdure'' shaped into niches that held sculptures were clipped into the dense woods, fitted with trelliswork dadoes to fill in their sparse bases. In a portrait painted by Henri Gascar, Madame de Montespan had herself painted while reclining on a baroque canopied couch, its curtains held up by carved cupids, with the barrel-vaulted ''galerie'' of Clagny visible behind her, as grand a piece of architecture as any sovereign could yet lay claim. About 1680, Adam-Frans van der Meulen painted a landscape view of a ''promenade en calèche'' with Louis XIV, Queen Marie-Thérèse, Madame de Montespan, and the king's son and his wife, which includes in a single ''coup d'œil'' both Versailles and Clagny, showing how closely the two châteaux were located.〔Musée de Versailles.〕 After the Marquise de Montespan was compromised in the notorious Affaire des Poisons, she was abandoned by the king for Mme de Maintenon, the governess of the marquise's children. As a result of her loss of status at court, she visited the house less and less. In 1685, the king formally made it over to her as a gift, partially for the sake of their eldest natural son, the beloved Duc du Maine. In June 1692, Madame de Montespan retired to a convent. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Château de Clagny」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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