Ok

En poursuivant votre navigation sur ce site, vous acceptez l'utilisation de cookies. Ces derniers assurent le bon fonctionnement de nos services. En savoir plus.

Châteaux de France et d'ailleurs - Page 70

  • Guide vert Châteaux de la Loire , Edition 2010

    Guide vert Châteaux de la Loire , Edition 2010Collectif

    • Guide (broché). Paru en 02/2010

    POUR COMMANDER SUR FNAC.COM

    Le Mot de l'éditeur : Guide vert Châteaux de la Loire

    Le nouveau guide Vert Chateaux de la Loire est plus simple à utiliser : découpé en micro régions, les informations touristiques sont présentées selon une logique géographique adaptée aux voyages d'aujourd'hui plutôt que par ordre alphabétique. Son format, réduit en hauteur, le rend plus pratique à utiliser et à emporter, sa nouvelle présentation, plus claire et plus aérée, le rend plus convivial à lire. Plus complet, son carnet d'adresses s'enrichit de nouvelles adresses d'hôtels et de restaurants classées par catégorie de prix et pour tous les budgets. Vous retrouvez dans ce guide les conseils Michelin : les sites touristiques étoilés "Vaut le voyage", "Mérite le détour", "Intéressant", un tableau des activités pour toute la famille par lieux touristiques et au fil des pages la rubrique "Avec les enfants". 3 marques-pages Bibendum vous permettront de repérer facilement les lieux que vous voulez visiter.

    Fiche détaillée : Guide vert Châteaux de la Loire

    Editeur Michelin
    Date de parution février 2010
    Collection Guide Vert France en Francais
    ISBN 2067146602
  • Livre d'exception : Grand Escalier du Château de Versailles LE BRUN, Charles

    Source de l'image : http://rvirtual.free.fr/applications/loisirs/divertis.htm

    Grand Escalier du Château de Versailles

    LE BRUN, Charles

    • Libraire : Bauman Rare Books (Philadelphia, PA, U.S.A.)

     

    POUR COMMANDER CE LIVRE

    Commander ce livre sur Abebooks.fr

    Description :

    LE BRUN, Charles. Grand Escalier du Château de Versailles, Dit Escalier des Ambassadeurs. Paris: Louis Surugue, [1725]. Slim atlas folio (16 by 21-1/2 inches), early 19th-century half green calf gilt, marbled boards, vellum corners. $3800. Early 18th-century compilation of this magnificent plate book, documenting Le Brun's grand staircase at Versailles, comprised of an engraved title page, nine engraved plates of description and 24 large folio engravings (six double-page) of Le Brun's intricate interior decorations. Called by Louis XIV "the greatest French artist of all time," Charles Le Brun enjoyed hundreds of commissions from the wealthy elite. As First Painter to the King, he was appointed director of Gobelins, a former tapestry manufactory, taken over by the King in 1664 and renamed the Royal Factory of Furniture to the Crown. At Gobelins Le Brun assembled the best artists—painters, sculptors, gilders, casters, weavers, and smiths—who decorated the King's Palaces, the Louvre, the Gallery of Apollo, Versailles, the Tuileries, the King's carriages and even the ships of the Navy. Everything that was manufactured at Gobelins was based on Le Brun's sketches and drawings. It is said that "No art in the 17th century remained untouched by LeBrun." This wonderful documentation of Le Brun's monumental grand staircase at Versailles shows what a great artistic project it was—with painted vaults, niches, frescos, statues and medallions—all depicting events of Louis XIV's reign. Engravings of the grand staircase first appeared shortly after its completion in 1679, as part of the famous Cabinet du Roi, an idea conceived by the King in about 1670 of putting on record, by the medium of engraving, the monuments of his country, his gardens, his palaces and the treasures they contained. The King's Engraver Charles Louis Simonneau was the designer of the Cabinet du Roi. From 1670 onward into the 18th century, selections of these engravings were restruck and bound up in special volumes as gifts to visiting dignitaries. In order to offset the expense of these productions, separate restrikes were also offered for sale, and in 1727 the first complete set of the Cabinet du Roi engravings appeared in 23 volumes, with additional plates and a catalogue. The plates in the fifth volume of that set related to the interior decoration of the Château Versailles—from which this selection of 24 plates was compiled. Many of these wonderful plates are dated 1720, 1721 and 1725, and Plate 24 may date as early as 1695. The principal engravers, Jean-Michel Chevotet and Louis Surugue, also produced the plates for Jean-Baptiste de Monicart's Versailles Immortalisé (1720-1725). Text in French. Brunet III, 910. Graesse IV, 136. See also Brunet, I, 1442-43. Decorative plates fine, marginal dampstains to descriptive plates (just touching lettering); rubbing to boards, expert restoration to spine. An extremely good copy with magnificent folio plates in fine condition. N° de réf. du libraire 74527

     

  • Guide du Routard Châteaux de la Loire , Edition 2010

    Guide du Routard Châteaux de la Loire , Edition 2010Collectif

    • Guide (broché). Paru en 11/2009
    • Le Mot de l'éditeur : Guide du Routard Châteaux de la Loire

      La Loire, le plus long des fleuves français, relayé par de multiples affluents, imprime sa douceur de vivre à des paysages enluminés, droit sortis d’un livre d’heures. Nous voilà dans le Saint des Saints de l’esprit français, cette cocagne heureuse qui résume le génie de notre nation : belles-lettres, architectures somptueuses et vins plaisants. Et puis le routard Châteaux de la Loire c’est toujours des adresses souvent introuvables ailleurs : déguster une matelote d’anguille sur une terrasse en bord de fleuve, et dormir à bon prix ; des visites culturelles originales en dehors des sentiers battus ; des infos remises à jour chaque année ; 9 cartes et plans détaillés. Avec le Routard, tracez votre propre route ! Rencontres, découvertes, partage, voilà des valeurs que nous défendons.

      Fiche détaillée : Guide du Routard Châteaux de la Loire

    Editeur Hachette Guides Tourisme
    Date de parution novembre 2009
    Collection Guide Du Routard France
    ISBN 2012448518
  • Actualité Le château de Goulaine, un bijou de famille

    Ouest-France / Pays de la Loire / Nantes / A la une de Nantes

    Nantes

    Le château de Goulaine, un bijou de famille

    vendredi 16 juillet 2010

    Le marquis Robert de Goulaine est décédé en février. Sa femme et ses deux fils ont décidé de poursuivre son oeuvre : faire vivre coûte que coûte ce patrimoine.

    « Mon père s'est battu toute sa vie pour Goulaine, nous ne pouvions pas laisser tout ça. » Impossible de laisser à d'autres le château (Xe, XVe,XVIIe siècles) et ses salons superbement décorés, le parc, la volière aux papillons, le musée Lefèvre-Utile et ses originaux de Mucha. Au décès de Robert de Goulaine, « homme-orchestre toujours présent », le choix de rester à Goulaine, « pas raisonnable », s'est vite imposé. La demeure, propriété de la même lignée depuis plus de dix siècles, reste donc dans le giron familial.« Nous sommes très attachés à cette maison qui a une âme », raconte Christophe de Goulaine, le benjamin des fils, qui a abandonné son activité de rénovation de bâtisses anciennes pour se consacrer, avec sa mère, au développement du lieu. À eux la gestion du château. À l'aîné, Mathieu, négociant en vin à La Roche-sur-Yon, les papillons.

     

    Chambres d'hôtes

    En 1957, Robert de Goulaine rachète le château à un oncle ne pouvant plus l'entretenir. Parents et enfants s'y sont installés en 1981, après d'imposants travaux de restauration. « J'avais à l'époque 14 ans, mon frère 16. Nous habitions des pièces à taille humaine, dans l'ancienne chapelle. Et nous avons vécu notre adolescence au rythme des manifestations culturelles qui s'y déroulaient », se souvient Christophe. Aujourd'hui, le tourisme et la location de salles permettent juste de maintenir en état l'ouvrage. Les Goulaine misent donc sur de nouveaux projets pour attirer le public.« Les mariages ont lieu dans le corps du logis. Nous pensons proposer des chambres d'hôtes pour que les proches parents puissent dormir sur place. » Les propriétaires envisagent également d'ouvrir à la visite une cuisine très ancienne qui possède d'imposantes cheminées, pour y organiser, pourquoi pas, des goûters d'autrefois.

    « Ici, nous ne regardons pas le visiteur du haut de notre tour, nous sommes heureux de montrer Goulaine », lâche Christophe. Et les touristes apprécient d'être reçus « par les gens qui portent le nom du domaine ». À l'accueil, c'est Gudrun qui reçoit les groupes. Avec Mathieu, elle bichonne aussi les papillons tropicaux, très chers au défunt. Une trentaine d'espèces cohabitent dans la serre parmi les végétaux, sous une température de 30 °C. « Les plantes nourricières doivent être impeccables, elles demandent des soins attentifs », explique Gudrun. Chaque mardi, elle reçoit des chrysalides du bout du monde qui deviendront papillons éphémères (ils vivent une dizaine de jours) à Haute-Goulaine.

    « Cela fait 1 000 ans que des gens se succèdent pour maintenir en état ce joyau. Si, dans cinq ans, la toiture cède, il faut que nous aussi, on soit là. »

     

    Magali GRANDET.
  • La cuisine des Châteaux

     

    La Demeure Historique

    "Ils ont débusqué ce qui est plus que jamais à la mode: le vrai aux fourneaux, l'authenticité des casseroles, la cuisine qui trempe dans les traditions, les racines, le bon usage ancestral du produit pris dans son domaine (...) Dieu, qu'elle est savoureuse, au long de ces pages colorées, la vie de château !"

    Le Figaro, Gilles Pudlowski

    "La Cuisine des Châteaux, une nouvelle collection pour nous rappeler qu'il est des châteaux qui, contre vents et marées, ont lutté avec le temps (...). Les auteurs de ces livres n'ont pas hésité, ils ont visité les plus beaux et ils ont même obtenu des propriétaires leurs secrets de cuisine. Et, pour couronner notre plaisir, ils nous offrent de superbes photos prises dans des cadres parfois somptueux, parfois rustiques, toujours très beaux (...) et l'on y découvre un merveilleux art de vivre."

    Thuriès

    Source : http://pagesperso-orange.fr/du.pontavice/cdc.htm

    POUR COMMANDER, CLIQUEZ ICI

    Cuisine des châteaux d'Auvergne

     

     

  • Aberystwyth Castle

     

    HomeMain MenuCastle IndexHistorical EssaysRelated EssaysWhat's NewLinksContact

    Aberystwyth Castle 

    Welsh Name: Llanbadarn
    In the town of Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, west Wales SN 579816

    Map link for Aberystwyth Castle

    Test copyright © 1998 by Lise Hull
    Photographs copyright © 2002 by Jeffrey L. Thomas

    Long before the Normans began their extensive castle-building program, which ultimately resulted in the subjugation of Wales (at least in theory), the promontory site now occupied by modern Aberystwyth was recognized for its defensive qualities. Iron Age settlers fortified the hilltop called Pen Dinas with a huge fortification, one of the largest Iron Age hillforts in the region. Today that hillfort dominates the skyline as you approach Aberystwyth from the south. Not only does it create an air of mystery, it also reminds us of the skills of its ancient builders. It remains a remarkable testimony to the Iron Age people that they could construct such a formidable hilltop fortification with their primitive technology. That it has survived over two thousand years makes their accomplishment all the more impressive.

    Not until the Normans marched into West Wales were castles in the true sense of the term built at Aberystwyth. The first was a ringwork castle, built by Gilbert de Clare, a prolific castle-builder in the early 12th century. Curiously, the earthen castle was the scene of much intrigue, as the Welsh and Normans repeatedly vied for control of the site. Traces of the stronghold, known as Castell Tan-y-castell, persevere alongside the River Ystwyth.

    Inevitably, the earth and timber defenses proved too vulnerable and a new site was chosen for a castle in Aberystwyth. This time the Welsh, led by Llywelyn the Great, built the castle in this seaside spot. Like its predecessor, the castle exchanged hands several times, and finally became useless against advances in weapons technology.

     

    The last castle built at Aberystwyth was its most imposing, and once ranked among the greatest in Wales. Today, the structure is entirely ruined, a forlorn jumble of towers and foundations most striking for their proximity to the pounding waters of the temperamental sea. For centuries before the castle's construction, the Welsh had proved quarrelsome, wanting their own Prince of Wales and demanding their independence. In the middle of the 13th century, Henry III attempted to appease the Welsh. When he officially named Llywelyn ap Gruffydd as the Prince of Wales, the English king recognized the Welshman's power and charisma. However, the title did not quiet the native Welsh prince, and in the early 1270's, Llywelyn refused to pay homage to the new king, Edward I. By 1276, Edward lost his patience with what he considered as insolence by Llywelyn and his people, and began his first campaign against the Welsh.

    In 1277, King Edward I ordered the construction of several formidable castles. They included FlintRhuddlanBuilth, and Aberystwyth. All these castles have survived and are accessible to the public. Of these four castles, two led the way into the future of castle construction. Designed as concentric fortresses, Rhuddlan and Aberystwyth Castles were innovative structures composed of rings of defenses, walls-within-walls, which allowed guards to defend their stronghold from several heights without firing upon their own men. Of the two castles, Aberystwyth is the most ruined, but in its heyday, the castle was every bit as intimidating and secure as its cousin in NE Wales.

     

             

    When approaching Aberystwyth Castle, you may be impressed by two things. First, the fortress is tremendously ruined, so you may find it very difficult to believe that it was as imposing as Edward's more famous castles, i.e., ConwyCaernarfonHarlech and Beaumaris. While the Big Four in the North have survived almost intact, this southernmost of Edward's castles is essentially devoid of building material. Second, the sea, only a few yards from the castle, commands your attention. The brisk winds (and, perhaps, the pounding rains) of a typical day along the Welsh coast may take your breath away. You might find yourself wondering how anyone in the Middle Ages could have withstood life in a stone fortress without central heating and other conveniences with which we are accustomed. However, you may also find yourself enthralled with the atmosphere created by the winds and waves, which leap over the sea wall at high tide! The sea has an uncanny way of removing you from the modern city and sending you back into the Middle Ages!

    During the reign of Edward I, Aberystwyth Castle developed into a fine, diamond- shaped concentric fortress. At each corner of the diamonds, towers or gatehouses were strategically planted to defend all sides of the castle. Constructing the castle was an enormous undertaking, quite expensive, and Edward sent his brother, Edmund of Lancaster, to oversee the project. Funds ran out, as did laborers and supplies. But, for the next twelve years or so, construction continued. In 1282, the Welsh revolt against the English king was waged at Aberystwyth Castle and other places throughout Wales. The still-incomplete castle and its associated town were severely burned and briefly captured by the Welsh. As a result, the king's elite master mason, James of St. George, arrived at Aberystwyth to overhaul the building project. His associate, Master Giles of St. George, was left in charge of completing the work, while James returned to North Wales. Finally, construction finished in 1289, at the huge cost of 4,300 pounds. In 1294, the Welsh again attacked the castle, but this time, the concentric fortress proved invulnerable, and after reinforcements and supplies arrived by shipboard, the English effectively thwarted the Welsh onslaught.

     

    How then did Aberystwyth Castle become such a ruin? Amazingly, as early as the 14th century, the concentric fortress began to decay. By 1343, when the Black Prince controlled the castle, the long chamber, the king's hall, the kitchen range, the main gateway and drawbridges, and the outer bailey were falling down. Interestingly, the closeness of the castle to the pounding sea caused much of the decay.

    In 1404, Owain Glyndwr seized the crumbling fortress, but, within a few years, the English regained possession for the last time. After 1408, Aberystwyth Castle lost its strategic value to the monarchy, and only minor repairs were attempted. In 1649, the castle became a victim of Oliver Cromwell's ruthless policy of slighting after the English Civil War, during which the garrison sided with the king, Charles I. Most of the stone that once formed the castle's walls was probably pilfered by locals, who took advantage of this manmade quarry.

     

    A walk into the castle ruins is a bit disquieting, especially when you know that a massive monument once stood on the spot. Pieces of masonry seem strewn haphazardly around the grounds. However, several significant pieces of the puzzle have survived, and hint at the wonders that originally dominated the site. When completed, diamond-shaped Aberystwyth Castle contained two twin-towered gatehouses, a barbican, four gateways, and several round towers placed along the curtain walls. Sadly, what has survived are parts of the outer ward's curtain and angle-towers and fragments of the inner ward's east and northwest gateways and angle- towers. The most notable relic is a tall tower in the inner ward.

     

          

    Among the seemingly random piles of masonry sits a more recent addition - a gorsedd circle of stones erected for a modern-day Eisteddfod. At first glance the circle seems just another part of the mayhem of the ruins, but after identification, visitors realize that these stones harken to prehistoric precursors. The atmosphere in the medieval castle then takes on an air of mystery and enchantment.

    In recent years, Aberystwyth's City Council has created a fine park through which visitors may stroll, unencumbered by fences or fees, at any reasonable time. The fortress perseveres and, as one writer quotes, "The tottering remains of this once magnificent and formidable building, constitute a picturesque ruin; and proudly assert their right to the honors of high and respectable antiquity."

     

    Lise Hull owns and operates Castles of Britain, an information and research web site providing a wide range of information on the castles of Britain. Mrs. Hull has a Masters Degree in Historic Preservation, and has visited well over 160 castles in Wales, England, Scotland and Ireland. She welcomes any and all questions concerning the castles of Britain, and invites people to visit her web site or contact her directly via e-mail at: castlesu@aol.com.

     

    More information about the Norman settlement of Ceredigion
    Visit the Castles of Britain Web Site

    HomeMain MenuCastle IndexHistorical EssaysRelated EssaysWhat's NewLinksContact

    Copyright © 2009 by Lise Hull and the Castles of Wales Website

     

     

    Sources : http://www.castlewales.com/aberystw.html