The Château de Menars is a château associated with Madame de Pompadour
situated on the bank of the Loire at Menars (Loir-et-Cher) in France.
History Towards 1646, Guillaume Charron, adviser of the King and
general treasurer of extraordinary levies supplying French forces in the
Thirty Years War built his chateau on a superb site overlooking the
Loire river at Menars. The original construction consisted of a main
building and two pavillons. His son, Jean-Jacques Charron, président à
mortier of the Parlement de Paris and brother-in-law of Jean-Baptiste
Colbert, inherited the estate in 1669. He added two unequal wings to the
château and enlarged the demesne, which Louis XIV made a marquisat in
1676.
In 1760, Menars was acquired by Mme de Pompadour, who paid almost
1,000,000 livres in installments and "sold some pearl bracelets to meet
the first payment". The king's mistress charged the architect Ange-Jacques
Gabriel with constructing two new wings on both sides of the two
pavillions, which replace those built in the seventeenth century. To
break the uniformity of the façade, Gabriel covered these two wings with
flat roofs "à l'italienne". On each side of the main courtyard, he built
two more pavillions: the Pavillion of the Clock on the right, which
contains the kitchens and is connected to the château by a subterranean
passageway, and the Pavillon of the Meridian on the left, where the
caretaker's lodge is found. He also directed important alteration work
on the interior of the building.
Mme de Pompadour by François Boucher.With the death of the
marquise de Pompadour in 1764, the château passed to her brother,
Abel-François Poisson de Vandières, marquis de Marigny, and general
director of the Bâtiments du Roi. Some new work was then realized under
the direction of architect Jacques-Germain Soufflot: the side court, and
the main building were doubled and the ground floor covered à
l'italienne, while the wings built by Gabriel were equipped with pitched
slate roofs à la française.
After 1830, Joseph, prince de Caraman-Chimay established at the
Château de Menars an establishment he called the "prytanée" which aims
to bring together young people of different conditions and nationalities
to give them a common education. To this effect, he built a vast
establishment to the east of the forecourt, which partly survives, as
well as a small gas works to provide coal and gas to the college.
Architecture In spite of the successive additions, the Château de
Menars preserves a simplicity of planning and of construction, with a
certain austerity reflecting the original spirit of the châteaux of the
seventeenth century. The later additions are still perfectly readable,
with the central body and its two pavilions between which the parts
added by Marigny fit and beyond which the two wings created by Gabriel
extend.
The corps de logis on the ground floor presents a large gallery
nowadays, created in 1912 by combining three spaces. The main building
still presents three large parts - the old hall in the center, room with
a dais on the left and salon for company on the right - ornate woodwork
designed by Gabriel as well as chimneypieces surmounted with mirrors.
The staircase of stone, as well as the unusual dado of mahogany in the
library on the first floor, date from the transformations effected by
the Marquis de Marigny.
Gardens
Marquis de Marigny by Alexandre RoslinJean-Jacques Cartwright, in
the second half of the seventeenth century, arranged a formal garden
with parterres, turf boulingrins, a canal with other bodies of water,
and two planted avenues "of elms in four rows, one of six hundred toises
and the others of four hundred"[citation needed] whence the view
contains the Loire and the surrounding countryside.
During Marigny's tenure an English garden was created in the
Bois-Bas, with a small ravine located to the west, in which Marigny
planted thickets of various diverse trees, sheltering cabinets of
trellis-work. One of them contained a famous hydraulic machine,
conceived by the mechanic Loriot. At the edge of the Loire, a Désert was
arranged in an old sand pit and was decorated as an artificial grotto.
Marigny devoted all his care to the installation of the park for
the presentation of its prestigious collection of sculpture. In front of
the château, in place of the former parterres, he created a broad
terrace. He remade the gardens in the style of his day while
commissioning many garden follies.
At the foot of the château, the "Rotunda of Abundance", built by
Soufflot, permits passage from the basement of the château to the
interior of the orangery. It originally housed a statue of Abundance by
Lambert-Sigisbert Adam the elder, which was replaced with a Louis XV by
Nicolas Coustou, which has now been replaced by a copy of Medici Venus
by Jean-Jacques Clérion.
Towards the east, the terrace ends in a roundabout where Marigny
built a kiosk in the Chinese manner designed by Charles De Wailly.
Between the terrace and the road, are ordered a series of hedges,
trellises, outdoor rooms of greenery as well as a kitchen garden. Below,
around a small fountain, Soufflot created a magnificent nymphaeum with
Serlian windows on the façade and, inside, the use of the Doric order
reveals an Italianate inspiration.
Notes ^ l'extraordinaire des guerres ^ Christine Pevitt Algrant, Christine Pevitt. Madame De
Pompadour: Mistress of France. Grove Press, 2002. p 261.
References Jean Chavigny, Le Chateau de Ménars - Un des joyaux du
Val de Loire, Librairie des Champs-Elysées, 1954. Paul Lewis. "Pompadour's palace" New York Times. June 14 1987.