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Archive for the ‘chateau’ Category

Monty Don – French Gardens

 

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Monty Don at Champ de Bataille Gardens

The Chateau du Champ de Bataille boasts a magnificent garden based in part on the classic French style and heavily influenced by drawings by the French designer le Notre – hence it’s inclusion in Monty Don‘s first programme of his new BBC2 series, “French Gardens”, which aired on 1st February 2013.

Monty was exploring “Gardens of Power and Passion” in and around Paris, with emphasis on those designed by Andre Le Notre, the son of Louis XVIII’s gardener at les Tuileries.  The original gardens at Champ de Bataille fell into disrepair and had virtually disappeared when the present owner, Jacques Garcia, took it upon himself to recreate a garden in the grounds of the chateau, which is situated next to one of the best golf courses in France ;) .

An outline plan of the former gardens had survived, which revealed the basic outline and terraces of the missing garden.

This was used only as a general guideline, rather than copied slavishly. The resulting garden (which was begun in 1993 and took 12 years to complete) is a masterful blend of classical French and Italian design and inspiration, with modern influences. Parterres, follies, classical temples, fountains, lakes – 43 hectares of park and garden in all, crowned by a stunning view that stretches over a mile down the garden from the main terrace of the chateau du Champ de Bataille.

Practical Information to visit Champ de Bataille

Château du Champ de Bataille gardens are open weekends and public holidays from Easter to end of October, from 14.00h to 18.00h.

May, June, September open every day 14.00h to 18.00h.

July to August open every day 10.00h to 18.00h.

Château du Champ de Bataille interior is open for “audioguide” visits on weekends and public holidays from Easter to end of October, from 15h30 to 17h30.

July to August open every day 15h30 to 17h30.

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Château de Carrouges: a Château made from Bricks!

Château de Carrouges

Château de Carrouges

A Brief History of the Château de Carrouges

Carrouges Castle began life as a fortified stronghold (donjon = keep) during the Hundred Years’ War – the keep is seen in the corner of the inner courtyard.

It became a lordly residence in the 15th century for the Blosset family and was extended with the addition of a residential wing next to the keep. In the 16th century the wonderful gatehouse was added, like a château in miniature – this is considered to be the earliest piece of Renaissance architecture in Normandy. Carrouges was refortified during the Wars of Religion with the construction of the west bastion, and finally in the late 16th century two ‘classical’ wings with remarkable staircases were added – see the video for a view of the interior.

The Blosset/de Tillier family owned the château and estate from the end of the 15th century until 1936, when the chateau and much of the furniture was purchased by the State as a historic monument.

A Brief Video of Château de Carrouges

Why Make A Château out of Bricks?

Brickwork Detail

One of the most distinctive features of the Château de Carrouges is the fact that it is largely made of brick.

Brick was chosen to build Carrouges in the 14th century due to the presence of local clay as a raw material and forests all around as a source of fuel for firing the bricks. Far more than just a simple building material, the variations in colour, shape and pattern allowed brick to be used decoratively. At Carrouges, the16th century parts of the castle made full use of this versatility to decorate the facades.

Maison du Parc Normandie Maine

Halfway down the driveway to the château is the Maison du Parc Normandie Maine - this is well worth a visit not only because it has a wealth of information and displays on the regional Parc Normandie-Maine, but also a superb gift shop with all kinds of local produce.

Practical Information

Château de Carrouges

Guided visits of the interior are in French and English and take 45 minutes – last visit 45 minutes before closing.

Open daily from 10h to 12h and 14h to 18h

Closed only on January 1, May 1, November 1, November 11 and December 25

2010 guided tour fee: 7€ for adults, under 18′s free

Maison du Parc Normandie-Maine

May to September Tuesday to Sunday 10h30 to 18h30
Rest of the year Tuesday to Friday 10h to 12h and 14h to 17h

Free entry to the exhibition halls and shop

Access: (route shown is from our B&B on the border of Normandy and Pays de la Loire).

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Chateâu de Villaines B&B

A delightful 17th century château – but the big attraction is the vegetable garden!

Château de Villaines Bed & Breakfast

We found out about Château de Villaines and its garden when visiting another in the same area called the Manoir de Massonnière – they are only about 16km (10 miles) apart and 65km away from our home near Alençon, so it makes sense to visit both if you are visiting one.

Before visiting Château de Villaines we tried looking for this château and garden on the Internet – unfortunately I could find out nothing about it before we took a chance on visiting it a couple of weeks ago, in mid-July.  Thankfully, it was worth taking the chance!  By strange coincidence, the website for the château has also appeared in Google results in the past week (further details below).

Château de Villaines

© Chateau de Villaines

Château de Villaines is located between Louplande and Chemiré-le-Gaudin, 15km from Le Mans in the Sarthe department of the Pays de la Loire, France.

The château is built on the foundations of a much older medieval château-fort, of which all that remains is part of the defensive moat on the southern side.  The present buildings date from the early 17th century and the Château de VIllaines is typical of châteaux from that period, oriented with the main facades facing precisely north and south, and being long and slim to allow light to penetrate from windows on both sides, making it very light and airy.

The main buildings comprise the Château itself, the orangery in the north west corner of the garden, and a large pigeonnière to the south-west side where pigeons would once have been kept for eating.

The ground floor is partly open to visitors.  The beautiful wrought iron hall staircase is listed and is part of the original building, as is the dining room panelling.  The panelling in the drawing room was replaced after a fire at the beginning of the 19th century.

Chateau de Villaines Hall and Staircase

© Chateau de Villaines

Marc and Marie-José Forissier have been the owners since 1997 and are responsible for developing the garden as it appears today.  Before they began work  there was an English landscape garden in front of the house; this has been replaced by a formal French garden with clipped box topiary and lawns.  To the right of the house is a recently planted orchard, to the south the remains a large moat and many newly planted trees.

However, its main feature is an extraordinary “potager en carrés“, a highly formalised and decorative fruit and vegetable garden divided into dozens – if not hundreds – of raised square beds and surrounded by a high wall.  This garden covering 2.5 acres was restored by the present owners and recently featured in Le Figaro magazine and in a new book on this distinctive type of garden.

Chateau de Villaines - Potager en Carrés

© Chateau de Villaines

It includes a fine array of peonies, espaliered pear trees and apple trees trained in cordons.  An attractive collection of Old Climbing Roses trail across arches giving the garden height. In 2005 it was awarded the prize for best potager garden in France by the French Horticultural Society (Société Nationale d’Horticulture de France).

The garden is classed as a national “Jardin Remarquable” -  a title it well deserves.

Practical Information

Open all of June, July and September every day from 10h to 12h and 14h to 18h (NB closed in August)

2010 entry fee: 4€

Website: www.chateaudevillaines.fr

Access (route shown is from our B&B on the border of Normandy and Pays de la Loire).

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Garden Festival at Château du Lude, near Le Mans

June 5th – 6th 2010, 10h30 to 19h00

Sale of plants, visits to the château, garden workshops and demonstrations, exhibitions of garden and countryside photography and watercolours.

60 stands featuring garden specialists from all over Western France.

Entry: Adults 8€, under 18 free.

Food and drink stalls in the grounds.

Chateau du Lude

Chateau du Lude

Chateau du Lude

Château du Lude, 70 miles south of our B&B, is the nearest of the recognised Loire Valley châteaux.  The chateau at Le Lude is unusual in that it has the appearance of a typical Loire Valley château – plenty of  Renaissance frills and fancy architectural features – but at its heart is a medieval fortress.

Because it had its beginnings as a defensive fortification, it is also unlike most Renaissance châteaux in being built in a defensive position atop a rocky spur, with a lively and attractive town (Le Lude) right outside its perimiter walls.

It is also distinguished in that it has been in the hands of the same family for the last 250 years and it is still a family home – if somewhat larger and more opulent than most!  There is a sense that this is very much a living, breathing home of the old French aristocracy, with its roots deep in history but very much alive and thriving today.

The Château du Lude is built on an outcrop on the banks of the river Loir, which joins the Loire a short distance downstream.  Just as attractive as the château itself are the superb grounds with rose gardens, parterres, water features and park laid out along the riverside.

Practical Information – Château and Grounds

Château du Lude is open daily from April 1 to September 30, except Wednesdays in April, May and September.  The grounds are open  10am till 12.30pm and 2pm to 6pm; the chateau interior is open afternoons only.

Getting There

The Château du Lude is south of Le Mans in the Sarthe department of the Pays de la Loire, ten miles west of the A28 motorway Exit 26.

For accommodation in Pays de la Loire check via our website Normandy Bed and Breakfast

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Perche Manor House Trail

The Perche Normandy B&B

A few kilometres to the east – quarter of an hour in the car – from our home and B&B in Ancinnes brings us to a lovely region of southern Normandy known as the Perche.

The region of the Perche is one of the most endearing of Normandy, with its varied and hilly landscapes, picturesque villages, its architectural beauty, and especially the richness of its food and agricultural produce.

Perche Manor House

Perche Manor House

The local lords of the sixteenth century lived what might seem an idyllic existence, combining lordly opulence with the simplicity of a country life. The understated beauty of the Percheron manor houses they built never fails to charm the visitor. These old, stone-built mini-chateaux, roofed with tiles and slates, are scattered throughout this rustic, agricultural region on the borders of Normandy and the Pays de la Loire.

The Perche is also the native land of a famous breed of horse, the Percheron, and of many families of emigrants to Canada. It is also the seat of the Counts of Perche and boasts a splendid Trappist abbey at Soligny la Trappe.

A Tour of the Perche Manor Houses

Bellême, Rémalard, Villeray, Colonard-Corubert, Nocé, … we take the basis of our route from the excellent little booklet “Routes Tranquilles du Perche” available at tourist offices in the region. We can loan visitors a copy.

Many mansions located on this route are privately owned and can’t be visited, but they can still be admired from the road. Some of the biggest and best, however, are open to the public – Courboyer, Lorière and Lormarin among them

Gateway to Bellême

Bellême Normandy B&B

On the edge of the beautiful forest that bears his name, Bellême is the historic capital of the Perche. It is a picturesque town with its medieval remains, a gateway porch of the fifteenth century, arches and many mansions dating from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, such as Hotel Bansard-des-Bois near the moat of the old fortress. See also the vicarage garden, overlooking the forest of Bellême.

Rémelard Normandy B&B

18 km northeast of Bellême is the town of Rémelard, birthplace of Octave Mirbeau, the author of the novel “Diary of a Chambermaid”. The town hall is located in the manor where he spent his childhood.

Moutiers-au-Perche Normandy Bed Breakfast

From Rémalard on the road to Moutiers-au-Perche on the right after about 5 km, make sure you see the stunning manor house in the valley of the Yore; it is a private mansion in the eighteenth century style.

At Moutiers-au-Perche, take a stroll to discover the village houses clinging to a hillside.

Villeray (Condeau) Normandy Bed Breakfast

Villeray is a typical, pretty Perche village, on the hillside below the sixteenth century château. There are some very pretty houses in the village. Along the river you’ll find a mill, and above the Villeray château with its white facade – now a hotel.

Lormarin Manor House

Nocé Normandy Bed Breakfast

8 km east of Bellême; some beautiful mansions are visible from the road.
On leaving Nocé, on the road to Berd’huis look out for the Manoir de Lormarin, constructed in the sixteenth century with three round towers. The former stables have been converted into an antiques shop “l’Atelier d’Alban” and you can wander round the grounds of the manor from Thursdays to Sundays, from 2 to 7pm.

Follow the road as far as Préaux-du-Perche and you’ll see the Manoir de Lubinière, another elegant sixteenth century manor house.

Manoir de Courboyer, Maison du Parc

Courboyer Normandy B&B

The Manoir de Courboyer, 3 km to the north of Nocé, is one of the most remarkable manor houses built in the Perche and dates from the late fifteenth century. It is one of the few open to the public and is not to be missed.

This magnificent Percheron mansion now houses the Maison du Parc Naturel Régional du Perche. A friendly team offers information on the Perche region and its history. In the “flag room” is one of the last three surviving battle flags of the “Kingdom”, captured by Pierre Fontenay during the sixteenth century War of Religion.

Down the road and 2 km from Saint-Cyr-la-Rosière, in a beautiful countryside, is the manor of Angenardière – yet another manor dating from the sixteenth century. It is flanked by two large towers.

Chateau de Lorière Normandy Bed Breakfast

The Park and Gardens of the Chateau de Lorière, 2 km north of Theil on the Rémalard road is open to the public (entrance fee – 1 hour visit) from May to September, weekends and holidays (the chateau interior is not) . English style gardens have been planted there over 150 years covering 15 acres. Not a typical Perche manor house, but an impressive chateau and well worth a visit.

Chateau Lorière Park

Chateau Lorière Park

Colonard-Corubert Normandy Bed Breakfast

A small village north-east of Bellême which presents a set of typical Percheron houses, dominated by the Great Farm House, former mansion of Colonard Corubert.

La Perrière Normandy Bed Breakfast

Perched on a spur of granite this little village has all the charm of an old fortress, with its old narrow streets. There is a very nice bar, tearooms and a brocante (antique shop) and artist sculptor’s gallery. You can see many picture-box houses of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Make sure you take a walk around the church, behind which are fantastic views of the valley.

La Perrière

More Information

If this area interests you, we have another trail in the Perche based on brocantes, bric-a-brac and antiques shops on our Normandy Bed and Breakfast website – or use this direct link http://www.normandie-chambres.co.uk/antiques.html

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