Online Encyclopedia

CHANTILLY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 847 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHANTILLY  , a

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town of
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northern France, in the department of
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Oise, 25 M . N. of Paris on the Northern railway to St Quentin . Pop . (1906) 4632 . It is finely situated to the north of the
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forest of Chantilly and on the
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left
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bank of the
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river Nonette, and is one of the favourite Parisian resorts . Its name was long associated with the manufacture, which has now to a
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great extent decayed, of lace and blonde; it is still more celebrated for its chateau and its park (laid out originally by A . Le
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nitre in the second
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half of the 17th century), and as the scene of the great
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annual races of the French
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Jockey Club . The chateau consists of the palace built from 1876 to 1885 and of an older portion adjoining it known as the chatelet . The old castle must have been in existence in the 13th century, and in the reign of Charles VI. the lordship belonged to
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Pierre d'Orgemont, chancellor of France . In 1484 it passed to the house of Montmorency, and in 1632 from that
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family to the house of Conde . Louis II., prince de Conde, surnamed the Great, was specially attached to the place, and did a great
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deal to enhance its beauty and splendour . Here he enjoyed the society of La Bruyere, Racine, Moliere, La Fontaine, Boileau, and other great men of his time; and here his steward Vatel killed himself in despair, because of a hitch in the preparations for the reception of Louis XIV .

The stables

close to the racecourse were built from 1719 to 1735 by Louis-
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Henri, duke of Bourbon . Of the two splendid mansions existing at that period known as the
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grand chateau and the chatelet, the former was destroyed about the time of the Revolution, but the latter, built for Anne de Montmorency by
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Jean Bullant, still remains as one of the finest specimens of Renaissance architecture in France . The chateau d'Enghien, facing the entrance to the grand chateau, was built in 1770 as a guest-house . On the
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death in 183o of the duke of Bourbon, the last representative of the house of Conde, the estate passed into the hands of Henri, duc d'Aumale,
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fourth son of Louis Philippe . In 1852 the house of Orleans was declared incapable of possessing
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property in France, and Chantilly was accordingly sold by
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auction .
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Purchased by the
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English bankers, Coutts & Co., it passed back into the hands of the duc d'Aumale in 1872 . By him a magnificent palace, including a
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fine
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chapel in the Renaissance style, was erected on the
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foundations of the ancient grand chateau and in the style of the chatelet . It is
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quadrilateral in shape, consisting of four unequal sides flanked by towers and built round a courtyard . The whole
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group of buildings as well as the pleasure-ground behind them, known as the
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Parterre de la Voliere, is surrounded by fosses supplied with
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water from the Nonette . On the terrace in front of the chateau there is a
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bronze statue of the constable Anne de Montmorency . The duc d'Aumale installed in the chatelet a valuable library, specially rich in
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incunabula and 16th century
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editions of classic authors, and a collection of the paintings of the great masters, besides many other
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objects of
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art . By a public act in 1886 he gave the park and chateau with its superb collections to the Institute of France in
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trust for the nation, reserving to himself only a
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life
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interest; and when he died in 1897 the Institute acquired full possession .

End of Article: CHANTILLY
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HENRI CHANTAVOINE (1850– )
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SIR FRANCIS LEGATT CHANTREY (1782-1841)

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