Chateau Fontainebleu - inside
Earlier I wrote about walking around Chateau Fontainebleau, one of our favorite walks here. Yesterday we returned to the chateau, not for a walk but to visit the interior. We’ve done this before - as in, three or four times before! - but we have enjoyed every visit and wanted to see it again before we left.
A very short history of the chateau: originally a hunting lodge for the French kings, in the first half of the 1500s, François 1 built probably 90% of what exists today. After François, every king and emperor of France added to - and in some cases, subtracted from - Chateau Fontainebleau. This makes Chateau Fontainebleau a museum of the French monarchy - everywhere you see changes made by successive kings and queens, often identified by those kings’ and queens’ monograms.
We had two pleasant surprises: first, more of the chateau has been restored and open to visitors; and second, the place was deserted. This made the visit much more enjoyable than being there as part of a crowd, even though Chateau Fontainebleau never approaches the crowds of Versailles.
Napoleon
The emperor Napoleon spent quite a bit of time at Chateau Fontainebleau, both with his first wife, Josephine, and his second, Maria-Theresa, so the chateau has collected a fair amount of Napoleon memorabilia and displays it in a small museum. Here are two of my favorite things there.
Crowds
We have been through Chateau Fontainebleau three or four times before, and while it’s never been really crowded (one of its attractions, we think), there have always been a fair number of fellow gawkers. This trip? Not so much.
Cour Ovale
The Cour Ovale has been the center of the chateau since it was first built, although the buildings forming it now were built mostly in the 1500s. For years I’ve looked out windows and through a gate and wished we could walk in it, but it has always been closed to the public. No longer! Visitors to the chateau can now stroll around the Cour Ovale, and we took full advantage! I love this courtyard and was very happy to be able to spend twenty minutes in it. A lot of historic people entered the chateau through the Cour Ovale.
As we (finally) left the Cour Ovale, I told Laurie that now I could die happy, having been there. An exaggeration, of course, but it was very fun to walk around this exceedingly beautiful courtyard that we’d had to look at from the outside for years!
Some Other Pix
The Trinity Chapel
Now you’ve seen the outside and inside of Chateau Fontainebleau. Our visit exceeded our expectations; new rooms had been restored and opened, we walked around the Cour Ovale and admired it, we had entire rooms and galleries to ourselves. Honestly, when we return, we’ll be back for our walks in the chateau’s gardens, and we will almost surely pay the admission to walk through the chateau’s rooms again.