TripAdvisor
- Chantilly

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Chantilly and Senlis: A Castle and
A Town Fit for Kings
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At Chantilly (allow at least 45 minutes by car from Paris, an hour if
there is traffic) are the monumental stables which had been commissioned by one of the
castles former owners: Henri-Louis, Duc de Bourbon, who wanted to be reincarnated as
a horse. Built by Jean Aubert between 1719 and 1735, the stables are over 600 feet in
length and once accommodated 240 horses, as well as 150 hounds for the hunt. Now known as
Le Musee Vivant du Cheval (the Living Horse
Museum), this is the most encyclopedic museum ever devoted to the history of horses,
showing how the animal has been a vital element in the art of war, as well as the hunt and
the military dress parade. However, dont presume that these awesome stables are only
for the horse buff and trainerkids adore the live hour-long spectacles of elegant
steeds trained to prance like the famed Lippinzanner horses from Vienna.
There is so much to see in Chantillys castle and gardens that
serious art lovers may find it hard to tear themselves away. It's an architectural
hodge-podge of styles that work harmoniously together, thanks to the stunning landscape of
canals and formal gardens conceived in the 17th century by Andre Lenotre. The
present-day edifice, built on Medieval foundations, includes a small chateau built in the
Renaissance by Pierre Chambige (who worked on the original Hotel de Ville in Paris), and a
larger chateau that was rebuilt in the second half of the 19th century by the
Duc dAumale, the fifth son of the last king of France, Louis-Philippe
dOrleans.
The castles history is long and impressive. Among its former
residents were the enormously wealthy High Constable Anne de Montmorency (chief minister
to Francis I and Henry II), and the Grand Conde, a military genius who hosted Louis XIV
for a three-day feast and theatrical in 1671 that was dramatized in the film Vatel starring Uma Thurman and Gerard Depardieu. Poor Vatel!
Hell go down in history as the most dedicated of caterers, knowing that he threw
himself on his sword when a fish delivery from Paris failed to turn up. By the time it
arrived, Vatel was dead.
The riches and rarities of Chantilly are such that visitors are asked
to partake of the guided tour, usually given in French. (For those who won't understand,
the museum has provided English-language handouts describing each room.) Although
Chantilly Castle was sequestered during the French Revolution and emptied of most of its
original furniture and paintings, you wouldnt know it when visiting today. Thanks to
the munificence of his godfather the Duc de Bourbon, the Duc dAumale inherited a
vast fortune upon his death, including Chantilly Castle and the Palais-Bourbon in Paris
(now the French National Assembly). While the Revolution of 1848 and the Second Empire of
Napoleon III forced him into exile in Twickenham, England, the Duc dAumale
didnt lose time amassing one of the most extraordinary private collections of
paintings, drawings and illuminated manuscripts outside the Louvre. Not only does
Chantilly boast furniture that was once commissioned by Marie-Antoinette and Louis XVI,
but it boasts almost 1,000 Old Master paintings, including works by Raphael, Ingres,
Poussin, and the largest single collection of 16th century royal portraits by Jean and Francois Clouet, including
those of Anne Boleyn, Diane of Poitiers, Catherine d Medicis, Francis I and Henry II as a child.
Chantillys more than 3,000 Old Master drawings allow for
continual temporary exhibits which are on handsome display in the former Hunt Dining Room,
which also boasts a stunning series of priceless Gobelins tapestries titled The Hunt
of Maximilian. (A few years ago, Bill Gates acquired four of these tapestries and
displayed them next to his Leonardo Codex.)
Bibliophiles will want to linger in the Duc dAumales
two-story private library, which boasts the finest illuminated manuscripts in France
outside the Bibliotheque Nationale. The most celebrated of these is only displayed in
facsimileThe
Very Rich Hours of the Duc de Berryan illuminated parchment almanac that
was commissioned in the 15th century by the King Jean Le Bon for his third son.
Not only does it provide a dazzling illustrated document of Medieval life, month by month,
but this book provides the only visual record of the Louvre under Charles V, when most of
Paris was still farmland.
The restaurant in Vatels former kitchen, La Capitainerie,
offers fine dining, including a chocolate delight served with creme Chantilly, the French
answer to whipped cream, which an 18th century chef concocted within these very
walls. The vast gardens of the castle are well worth a walk, perhaps a necessary antidote
to the whipped cream.
Nearby is Senlis. Known to the Romans as Augustomagus (Augustuss
Market) in the first century before Christ, this picturesque town is one of two left in
France that is still surrounded by a 12-foot thick Gallo-Roman wall built in the third
century to stop invaders in their tracks. Originally over three miles in circumference,
sixteen of the walls original 28 towers
are still extant. A number of them were used to shore up the towns 17th
and 18th century buildings. It was at Senlis in 987 that Louis XVIs
ancestor Hughes Capet, the founder of the Capetian dynasty, was named king of France.
Later, in 1430, Joan of Arc, defeated the Duke of Bedford on the Senlis plain before her
capture by the Burgundians.
The towns most famous monument is the Cathedral of Notre-Dame,
whose 78 meter-high stone steeple was built in the 13th century, during the
reign of Saint-Louis, the same monarch who commissioned the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris. Many
people come to admire the cathedrals western portal, which features the first stone
representation of the Virgins Ascension to Heaven. Begun in 1155 and consecrated in
June 1191, the cathedrals architecture was inspired by Abbe Suger of Saint Denis.
In 1504, thunder struck the roof of the church and set aflame the eaveschronicles
from the period noted that the roofs leading poured down upon the town like rain.
Both Louis XII and Francis I raised the funds to rebuilt the church and raise the vaulting
an additional 24 feet. Its thanks to their efforts that the cathedrals
southern facade, now under restoration, is the penultimate example of Flamboyant Gothic.
The town also offers a handsome hunting museum, the first of its kind in France, which
boasts stunning engravings by Durer and Callot, as well as fine animal paintings by Rosa
Bonheur and Jean-Baptiste Oudry.
At Christmas-time the streets of Senlis are beautifully decorated with
miniature fir trees tied with red or white bows, and the shop windows are filled with
tempting pastries, chocolates and crafts. A charming antique print shop offers elegantly
framed old engravings of Senlis and Chantilly Castle.
Senlis and Chantilly are rewarding destinations for a day trip from
Paris, resplendent with art, history--and horses.
January, 2002 - Rachel Kaplan