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FONTAINEBLEAU , a See also: town of See also: northern See also: France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of See also: Seine-et-See also: Marne, 37 M
.
S.E. of See also: Paris on the railway to See also: Lyons
.
Pop
.
(Igoe) 11,1o8
.
Fontainebleau, a town of clean, wide and well-built streets, stands in the midst of the See also: forest of Fontainebleau, nearly 2 M. from the See also: left See also: bank of the Seine
.
Of its old houses, the See also: Tambour mansion, and a portion of that which belonged to the See also: cardinal of See also: Ferrara, both of the 16th century, are still preserved; apart from the palace, the public buildings are without See also: interest
.
A statue of General Damesme (d
.
1848) stands in the See also: principal square, and a monument to President See also: Carnot was erected in 1895
.
Fontainebleau is the seat of a subprefect and has a tribunal of first instance and a communal See also: college
.
The school of See also: practical artillery and See also: engineering was transferred to Fontainebleau from See also: Metz by a decree of 1871, and now occupies the See also: part of the palace surrounding the cour See also: des offices
.
Fontainebleau has quarries of See also: sand and See also: sandstone, saw-mills, and manufactories of See also: porcelain and gloves
.
See also: Fine grapes are grown in the vicinity
.
The town is a fashionable summer resort, and during the season the president of the Republic frequently resides in the palace . This famousSee also: building, one of the largest, and in the interior one of the most sumptuous, of the royal residences of France, lies immediately to the See also: south-See also: east of the town
.
It consists of a series of courts surrounded by buildings, extending from W. to E.N.E.; they comprise the Cour du Cheval Blanc or des Adieux (thus named in memory of the parting scene between See also: Napoleon and the Old Guard in 1814), the Cour de la Fontaine, the Cour Ovale, built on the site of a more See also: ancient chateau, and the Cour d' See also: Henri IV.: the smaller Cour des Princes adjoins the northern wing of the Cour Ovale
.
The exact origin of the palace and of its name (See also: Lat
.
Bons Bleaudi) are equally unknown, but the older chateau was used in the latter part of the 12th century by See also: Louis VII., who caused
See also: Thomas
See also: Becket to consecrate the Chapelle St Saturnin, and it continued a favourite residence of See also: Philip
See also: Augustus and Louis IX
.
The creator of the See also: present edifice was See also: Francis I., under whom the architect Gilles le See also: Breton erected most of the buildings of the Cour Ovale, including the See also: Porte Doi-6e, its See also: southern entrance, and the Salle des Fetes, which, in the reign of See also: Henry II., was decorated by the Italians,
See also: Francesco Primaticcio and Nicolo dell' Abbate, and is perhaps the finest See also: Renaissance chamber in France
.
The Galerie de See also: Francois I. and the See also: lower storey of the left wing of the Cour de la Fontaine are the See also: work of the same architect, who also rebuilt the two-storeyed Chapelle St Saturnin
.
In the same reign the Cour du Cheval Blanc, including the Chapelle de la Ste Trinite and the Galerie d'Ulysse, destroyed and rebuilt under Louis XV., was constructed by See also: Pierre Chambiges
.
After Francis I., Fontainebleau owes most to Henry IV., to whom are due the Cour d' Henri IV., the Cour des Princes, with the adjoining Galerie de Diane, and Galerie des Cerfs, used as a library
.
Louis XIII. built the graceful horseshoe See also: staircase in the Cour du Cheval Blanc; Napoleon I. spent 12,000,000 francs
on See also: works of restoration, and Louis XVIII., Louis Philippe and Napoleon III. devoted considerable sums to the same end
.
The palace is surrounded by gardens and ornamental waters—to the See also: north the Jardin de 1'Orangerie, to the south the Jardin Anglais and the See also: Parterre, between which extends the lake known as the Bassin des Carpes, containing See also: carp in large numbers
.
A space of over 200 acres to the east of the palace is covered by the See also: park, which is traversed by a canal dating from the reign of Henry IV
.
On the north the park is bordered by a vinery producing fine See also: white grapes
.
Forest of Fontainebleau.—The forest of Fontainebleau is one
of the most beautiful wooded tracts in France, and for generations it has been the chosen haunt of French landscape painters
.
Among the most celebrated spots are the Vallee de la Solle, the
See also: Gorge aux Loups, the Gorges de Franchard and d'Apremont, and the Fort l'Empereur
.
The whole See also: area extends to 42,200 acres, with a circumference of 56 m
.
Nearly a quarter of this area is of a rocky nature, and the quarries of sandstone supplied a large part of the paving of Paris
.
The See also: oak, See also: pine, See also: beech, See also: horn-See also: beam and birch are'the chief varieties of trees
.
It is impossible to do more than mention a few of the See also: historical events which have taken place at Fontainebleau
.
Philip the See also: Fair, Henry III. and Louis XIII. were all See also: born in the palace, and the first of these See also: kings died there
.
See also: James V. of Scotland was there received by his intended bride; and
See also: Charles V. of
See also: Germany was entertained there in 1539
.
Christina of Sweden lived there for years, and the gallery is still to be seen where in
1657 she caused her secretary Monaldeschi to be put to See also: death
.
In 1685 Fontainebleau saw the See also: signing of the revocation of the edict of See also: Nantes, and in the following See also: year the death of the See also: great Conde
.
In the 18th century it had two illustrious guests in See also: Peter the Great of See also: Russia and Christian VII. of See also: Denmark; and in the early part of the 19th century it was twice the residence of See also: Pius VII. in 1804 when he came to consecrate the emperor Napoleon, and in 1812-1814, when he was his prisoner
.
See Pfnor, Monographie de Fontainebleau, with text by ChampollionSee also: Figeac (Paris, 1866) ; Guide artistique et historique au palais de Fontainebleau (Paris, 1889) ; E
.
See also: Bourges, Recherches sur Fontainebleau (Fontainebleau, 1896)
.
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