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| Loire Valley - Chateau de Chenonceau |
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| Chateau d'Azay-le-Rideau - Loire Valley |
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| Chateau de Chambord |
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| Chateau de Cheverny |
" it's almost impossible to get lost on the well-signed cycling route; the gardens are fantastic; the Loire countryside is mercifully flat and divertingly beautiful; the food and wine are exquisite; and – best of all – there was the miracle of reaching our hotel every night to find our luggage waiting for us. Oh, and if you really can't help yourselves, the chateaux aren't bad either."There are several companies that organise inclusive tours of the Loire Valley by bike. Loire à Vélo website (www.loire-a-velo.fr) - Location de Vélos (www.locationdevelos.com); Biking France (www.randovelo.fr); or the luxurious River Loire (www.riverloire.com). There is also the Loire Valley Tourist Board (visaloire.com) - see links.
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| Chateau de Brissac - Loire Valley |
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| Chateau de Brissac - Loire Valley |
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| Charles de Cossé - Count of Brissac |
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| Loire Valley - Chateau de Brissac - Theatre |
Blois is an ancient town situated between Orleans and Tours in
the Loir-et-Cher region of the Loire Valley. The
Château de Blois is one of the
most famous and
most impressive of the 300 chateaux in the Loire Valley. It is
also one of the most historically important, as it was here that
King Henri III had his rival Henri Duc de Guise asassinated in
1588, thus determining the future direction of France for
centuries to come. It is located on the right bank of the River
Loire, in the centre of the town of Blois, and is now a fine
example of how architecture evolved from the Middle Ages to the
Classical Period. It was the preferred residence of the Kings of
France throughout the Renaissance Period.
It gained some notoriety in the 9th century when during the reign
of Charles le Chauve (Charles the Bald) it became home to “Blesum
Castrum” – the Château de Blois. In the year 854, it was attacked
by Vikings.
The fortress was rebuilt and was at the centre of the domain of
the Counts of Blois, powerful feudal landowners and lords during
the Xth and XIth centuries with estates stretching through the
regions of Blois, Chartres and Champagne.
The first fortress was built by Thibaud le Tricheur (Thibaud the
Cheat) in the Xth century. There is also a charter showing
Thibaud III, dispensing justice in the fortress of Blois near the
tower castle.
After the feudal
period, the castle was rebuilt by the Châtillon family in the
thirteenth century and became one of the most beautiful and
imposing castles of the Kingdom of France, as indicated in the
chronicles of Jean Froissard. In 1392, the last descendant of the
Châtillon family, Guy II de Blois-Chatillon, sold the castle to
the brother of King Charles VI, Gaston d’Orléans, who took
possession of it in 1397 at the death of Guy II.
Gaston d'Orleans
Louis d'Orléans was assassinated in Paris in 1407 on the orders
of Jean sans Peur (Jean the Fearless), Duke of Bourgogne. Louis’
widow Valentine Visconti, left Paris to live at Blois where she
died the following year, after having had engraved on the castle
walls “Rien ne m'est plus, plus ne m'est rien”(There is nothing
more for me, more is nothing for me).
Joan of Arc also made Blois the base for her operations, in 1492,
for the relief of Orleans where Charles, son of Louis d’Orleans
was being held prisoner by the English. When Charles eventually
returns from captivity in England in 1440 he rebuilds parts of
the castle. Of the fortress of this period there remains only the
Grande Salle and the cylindrical tower of Foix.
In 1462, Charles d’Orléans’ son was born in the Château of Blois.
He became King of France in 1498, under the name of Louis XII. It
was at this time that the castle became the principal Royal
residence for the King. With his wife Anne de Bretagne, the King
embarked upon rebuilding the castle in a late gothic style, with
a Renaissance garden. The castle was also used at that time as a
place for diplomatic meetings and venues.
In 1515 Francois I set up court at the castle and started work on
a second wing in a Renaissance Style. Charles Quint stayed at the
castle in 1539.
La Chambre de la Reine
The castle was home to the Kings of France of this period, Henri
II, Henri III, François II, Charles IX and Queen Catherine de
Medicis who came back to the castle to die.
Henry III
King Henry III,
who was driven from Paris during the Wars of Religion, took up
residence at Blois, where he held the Estates-General convention
1576 and 1588. During this convention, on 23rd December 1588 the
king had his arch-rival, Henri de Guise, assassinated in his room
on the second floor by the king’s bodyguard known as "the
Forty-five".
His body was
burned in one of the rooms and his remains thrown into the Loire.
The same day his son Charles and his brother Louis, Cardinal de
Guise and Cardinal de Lorraine were arrested. The cardinal was
executed the next day in the dungeons.
.................................. Henri Duc de
Guise
This led to further bloody battles between the supporters of
Henri III and the supporters of Henri Duc de Guise and eventually
led to Henri III himself being stabbed by a monk Jacques Clement,
a member of the League, on 1st August 1589, he died on 2nd
August. Henri III was the last of the Valois Dynasty (1328 -
1589).
Henri III was succeeded by his cousin Henri de Navarre - Henri IV
- the first King of the Bourbon dynasty.
In 1626, Louis XIII gave the whole of the County of Blois to his
brother, who loved the castle and who claimed that the air around
Blois was curing him, but when he died, in 1660, the castle was
abandoned.
Louis XIV didn’t live in the castle, and let old servants divide
the rooms of the castle into a number of smaller apartments. In
1720, the Regency decided to install the Parliament in exile in
it. In 1788 the War Ministry billeted the Royal Comtois, a
cavalry regiment in it.
The fictional Musketeer, Athos, the count of La Fère, from "Les
Trois Mousquetaires" by Alexandre Dumas, has a castle in
Blois.
By the time of the Revolution in 1789, the castle had already
been abandoned for 130 years, and everything that reminded people
of the monarchy was plundered. The building fell into such a
state of disrepair that its demolition was contemplated, but
Napoléon I donated it to the town of Blois en 1810. As a result
of the lack of money, the castle was again used as army barracks.
Even so the François 1 wing was opened to the public and visited
by famous writers of the day such as Victor Hugo, Honoré de
Balzac and Alexandre Dumas.
In 1841 the castle was listed as an ancient monument and was
partly restored, thanks to the efforts of Prosper Mérimée.

.................................. The Spiral Staircase
Today, the Château of Blois is a combination of a variety of
styles - gothic, Renaissance, classic, with traces of the
Medieval castle that was there in the past.
Inside the visitors can admire amongst other features:-
The Salle des Etats, the oldest civil gothic room in France.
The Musée Lapidaire, which contains a range of items found in a
medieval castle.
The magnificent Chambre de la Reine (Queen’s Chamber) - the room
in which Catherine de Medicis died.
The Chambre du Roi (King’s Chamber) – which has the largest
fireplace in the Castle.
The Gaston d’Orléans Wing houses a room devoted to the history of
the castle and other rooms designed for temporary exhibitions and
conferences.
Opening Times of the Chateau de Blois
From January 2 to March 31 : 9 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. and 1.30 p.m.
to 5.30 p.m.
From April 1 to June 30 : 9 a.m. to 6.30 p.m.
From July 1 to August 31 : 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
From September 1 to September 30 : 9 a.m. to 6.30 p.m.
From October 1 to November 2 : 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
From November 3 to December 31 : 9 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. and 1.30
p.m. to 5.30 p.m.
The ticket office closes 30 minutes before the closing time for
the castle .
The Château d’Ussé in the Loire
Valley (la Vallée de la Loire) is a private estate
belonging to the seventh Duke of Blacas. It is famous as being
the castle that inspired Charles Perrault's children's story
La Belle au Bois Dormant known in English as
Sleeping Beauty and is immediately recognizable
as such.
It is open to the public for visits and has been a listed
building since 1931. It is located on the banks of the River
Indre, a tributary of the Loire, near the Chinon Forest, 33 km
from Tours and 14 km from Chinon. The nearest village, the
village of Rigny, and the village of d’Ussé were merged in the
XIXth century to become the Commune of Rigny-Ussé.
The site has been inhabited since prehistoric times and is said
to have belonged to Uccius a gallo-roman landowner. In 1004, the
first Lord of Ussé was the Guelduin the First (known as the Devil
of Saumur), the Viking Chief of Saumur. Gueldiun built the first
wooden fortress on the site, but it was his son Guelduin II who
set out to build a stone castle.
In 1424, towards the end of the Hundred Years' War, Jean V de
Bueil, the Lord of Ussé, Count of Sancerre and King's Captain
built the base of the present castle. His son Antoine, who
married Jeanne de Valois daughter of King Charles VII started the
rebuilding of the castle in the XVth century style, but, deeply
in debt, he was forced to sell it in 1485 to Jacques d’Espinay.
His grandson Rene d'Espinay was also forced to sell the chateau
due to debts, caused partly by the works carried out on the
chateau, in 1557 to Suzanne de Bourbon.
After having many different owners, the château was bought in
1659 by Thomas Bernin Marquis of Valentinay, King Louis the
Fourteenth’s secretary. In 1664 the Marquis created the gardens
based on drawings by Le Nôtre. In 1700, the estate became a
Marquisate. Louis II Bernin de Valentinay who was a friend of
Charles Perrault invited him to the château several times and the
author was inspired by the castle to write the well-known
children’s story La Belle au bois dormant (Sleeping Beauty).
French writer and philosopher Voltaire is said to have lived at
the castle while writing a part of La Henriade, a poem dedicated
to the King Henry IV of France and published in 1713.
In 1780, the descendents of Louis Bernin de Valentinay sold the
château.
The castle was transferred to the Duras Family in 1807.
Châteaubriand is said to have written some of his Mémoires
d’Outre-tombe there. Châteaubriand was a friend of Claire de
Kersaint, wife of the Duke of Duras and made her a gift of a
number of cedars of Lebanon which he had brought back in from the
Holy Land in 1817, and which can still be seen near the chapel.
The Duke of Duras’s daughter gave the estate to her great nephew
the Duke of Blacas, and the current owners of the castle are his
descendants.
The chapel situated inside the castle compound is called the
Collégiale Sainte Anne d’Ussé and was built by Jacques d’Espinay
and his wife Lucrèce de Pons in 1521. Locally it is known as
Notre Dame d’Ussé and dedicated to the Virgin’s mother. It serves
as a private oratory and the stalls from the XVIth century,
decorated in an Italian style, are by Jean Goujon.
The white Truffeau stone used in the building and the combined
medieval, gothic and Renaissance style give the castle its
beautiful enchanting shape, a perfect set for a beautiful
sleeping princess. The gardens à la française were designed by Le
Nôtre, who also designed the gardens at Versailles for Louis
XIV.
Inside the
château, the entrance hall dates back to the XVth century, while
the staircase is from the XIXth century. The guards room was the
entrance in the XVth century, which contains a collection of arms
and oriental objects (most of them Indian) brought back by Count
Stanislas de Blacas.
The Salon Vauban, contains Regency-style furniture that can all
be taken apart, allowing the fabric to be changed according to
the season and also a XVIth century Italian cabinet in blackened
and ebony inlaid with mother-of-pearl and lapis lazuli which has
49 secret drawers.
The old kitchen now contains tapestries from the XVIIth century.
It is the oldest room in the château. It used to open onto an
underground passage dug directly into the foundations of the
château, that came out again in the middle of the Chinon Forest.
This passage is now blocked.
There are also the Grande galerie, the Grand Escalier, the
Antichambre and the Chambre du Roi all of which are beautifully
furnished with various collections of portraits
The battlements are the backdrop for a scene from Charles
Perrault’s ‘Sleeping Beauty’ using wax figures.
The King's Bed Chamber

This room was restored in 1995. All the furniture dates back to
1770, the salon and the four-poster bed are in Louis XVI style.
The Venice mirror is from the XVIIth siècle. The four chests of
drawers are in different styles - two being Regency, one Louis XV
and the last Transition. The oak floor dates back to the XVIIth
century.
Visiting times for the château (inside the château and the
gardens)
From February 18 to March 31 10.00 to 18.00
From February 1 to June 30 10.00 to 19.00
From July 1 to August 31 9.00 to 19.00
From September 1 to November 11 10.00 to 18.00
Address :
Château d’Ussé
37420 Rigny Ussé
Tel : 02 47 95 54 05
Fax : 02 47 95 43 58
The château was
built on the site of an old fortified castle in the heart of a
forest domain of 5,441 hectares. Its construction took 22 years,
from 1525 to 1547. The estate is surrounded by a wall that is 33 km
long, making it the biggest enclosed forest park in Europe.
The Chambord
roofscape is asymmetrical and highly original with eleven kinds of
towers and three styles of chimney. One of the more striking
architectural features is the double-helix open staircase that
serves as the centerpiece of the château. The two helixes rise up
the three floors of Chambord without ever meeting, they are
illuminated from above by what is often described as a lighthouse
at the highest point. Some people have suggested that Leonardo da
Vinci may have designed the staircase, but this has never been
confirmed. Certainly given the importance of the double-helix there
is clearly an idea for a novel linking together Leonardo da Vinci,
Francois I, the Holy Grail and the DNA of Christ !
Château de
Cheverny.
The château was
opened up to the public by the owner in 1922. It is one of the most
visited of the Loire Valley Châteaux with its magnificent
objets d’art, tapestries and decorations. The family still lives
there.
The dining room
with its splendid fireplace gilded with gold leaves is decorated
with wood panel depicting the story of Don Quixote. The fireplace
is surmounted by a bust of King Henri IV. The furniture in the room
is engraved with the coat of arms of the Hurault de Cheverny
family, as are the Cordoue leather coverings of the walls.
The Loire Valley and the Château de
Chenonceau
Situated to the south-west of Paris, the Loire
Valley (La Vallée de la Loire in
French) is without doubt one of the most strikingly beautiful
regions of France. It is popular with those wishing to visit a
part of France other than Paris or the Atlantic or Mediterranean
coastal resorts such as Biarritz or Cannes.

Le Château de Chenonceau
The Loire Valley is known as "le Jardin de la France" (the Garden of France) and "le Berceau de la Langue Francaise" (the Cradle of the French Language). The most celebrated and visually striking element of the Loire Valley is its architectural heritage, which is visible in its magnificent historic towns such as Angers, Amboise, Chinon, Blois, Saumur, Orléans, and Tours, but also of course in its famous "châteaux" often referred to in English as castles, but in fact "palaces" or "stately homes" would be a more accurate description.
A short video about the Chateau de Chenonceau.
The most well-known and most popular with visitors are the
Château de Chambord, Château d'Ussé, Château d'Amboise, Château de Cheverny, Château de Villandry and
Château de Chenonceau.
At the turn of the century, in the year 2000, UNESCO named the
part of the Loire valley situated between Maine and
Sully-sur-Loire, as a World Heritage Site (Site du Patrimoine
Mondial). In the words of the committee this part of the Loire
Valley is: "an exceptional cultural landscape, of great beauty,
comprising historic cities and villages, great architectural
monuments - the Châteaux - and lands that have been cultivated
and shaped by centuries of interaction between local populations
and their physical environment, in particular the Loire
itself."
There are, in fact, more than 300 châteaux in the Loire Valley,
some of which were built many hundreds of years ago. This
proliferation of châteaux in the same region was due to the fact
that the French kings decided to construct their châteaux in this
area, and the nobility, who were keen, or even desperate, to
remain close to the seat of French power, decided to do likewise,
which in turn attracted the very best landscape designers and
resulted in the magnificent châteaux that we see today.
But royals are nothing if not fickle, and in the middle of the
16th century King Francois I decided to leave the Loire Valley
and move the seat of French power back to the ancient capital of
Paris. The great architects followed behind of course, but the
Loire Valley continued to be the place where most of French
nobles preferred to spend the majority of their time.

Francois I 1494 - 1547
In the 17th century, however, King Louis XIV made Paris the
permanent site for the royal family by building the Palace of
Versailles just outside Paris. The nobility and the wealthy still
continued, nevertheless, to renovate their existing châteaux or
to build new ones which they used as summer residences in the
Loire valley.
The Château de Chenonceau
The Château de Chenonceau is situated in the
commune of Chenonceau. It is a private château that is the most
visited “Monument Historique privé” in France. It is furnished
and decorated with many beautiful rare tapestries and paintings,
is surrounded by a number of gardens and has itsd own wine
domain.
There has been a
fortified castle and a mill on the site since 1230, as the
strategic location was useful for controlling the passage from
one bank of the river to the other. The old castle, which
belonged to the Marques Family was destroyed and then rebuilt,
but poor management, followed by serious financial problems,
forced the Marques family to put it up for sale and after a
fierce legal battle the Marques Family saw its castle confiscated
and Thomas Bohier took possession of it.
Thomas Bohier was the King’s lawyer and secretary, he was also a
very important figure and very shrewd. He and his wife carried
out numerous changes to the castle. He demolished the old one and
built the new one on the pillars of the old mill, retaining only
the Tour des Marques (the tower) and the well. The construction
works took over ten years and were supervised by Thomas Bohier’s
wife while he himself was away.
When Thomas Bohier died, it was discovered he had been guilty of
embezzlement, and King Francois I imposed a hefty fine on his
inheritance and confiscated the estate ! The château thus became
a Royal Domain.
Diane de
Poitiers, the ‘favorite’ of King Henri II, received it
as a present from the King in 1547. It was she who had the bridge
built to link the castle to the left bank, but not the galleries
on top which were the creation of Catherine de Medici.
After the death of Henri II, Catherine of Medici forced Diane to
return the domain to the Crown. It is Catherine of Medici who
gave the château the form it has today. She built the two
galleries on top of the Pont de Diane thus creating a reception
space within the château that was and is still unique in the
world.
Chenonceau is also known as the “château des Dames”, due to the
fact that it has been owned by so many women and so many changes
to it were instigated by them.
In 1864 Marguerite Pelouze, a rich heiress, entrusted the
restoration of the château to Felix Roguet, in particular the
original façade modified by Catherine of Medici. The works were
so costly however that the Chateau was seized by the creditors
and in 1891 was sold to a rich American, Mr Terry. It was later
sold by his descendants at auction in 1913 to Henri Menier and
when he died soon thereafter it was inherited by his brother
Gaston Menier.
During the First World War, Gaston Menier allowed the chateau to
be used as a military hospital. More than two thousand injured
soldiers were cared for within its walls. The Menier family still
own the Chateau de Chenonceau today.
During the Second World War the chateau was actually on the
demarcation line part of it being in the Occupied Zone and part
in the Free Zone.
In 1988, the Prince of Wales and Princess Diana visited the
castle which was closed to the public for the occasion.