France Tourist Attractions -
Fontainebleau Castle and Forest
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Fontainebleau Castle and Forest
The Fontainebleau Forest is an outstanding Protected Natural
Reserve with a variety of wildlife and activities to suit all comers
The Fontainebleau Castle is the largest of the
French Royal Castles |
THE GARDENS AND THE ORNAMENTAL LAKES
Like
the buildings, the gardens of Fontainebleau have undergone
numerous changes at the mercy of fashion, political will, lack
of maintenance or anarchic plant development.
Diane’s Garden or the Queen’s Garden :
Until Louis Philippe, a space completely closed in by an
orangery built by Henri IV in brick and stone, like the
remaining building which hosts the Deer Gallery on the ground
floor and the Diane Gallery on the first.
In the centre of the garden, one can discover
Diane’s Fountain (1602), topped by the statue of the goddess
of hunting and surrounded by four bronze dogs come from the
Louvre where they had previously been installed.
English Garden :
Formerly the Pine Garden, this garden was redesigned in
the English style in the 19th century and its broad lines were
developed under Napoleon 1st, with an artificial river running
through it. Towards the back of it, an ornamental lake marks
the site of the legendary “Fontaine-Belle-Eau”.
The Carp Pond :
This was once a swamp, which François 1st had transformed
into a decorative lake, thus launching the “mirror of water”
fashion much favoured by the French before being imitated all
over Europe…
As in all European royal domains, the lake is
populated by carps reserved for the sovereign’s table.
The Grand Grounds or the Grounds of the Tiber :
Conceived by Le Nôtre, this is a French style garden which has
unfortunately lost its boxtree décor.
The landscape opens onto two perspectives:
- One towards the forest where a widening of the terrace
receives the ornamental lake of the Tiber
- The other, towards the canal, above the ornamental lake with
the waterfalls.
- Beyond and below lies the grand park which extends into the
forest.
The Grand Park and the Grand Canal :
A surface of 84 hectares, with linear paths, star-shaped
crossroads and a large canal approximately 1200m long, built
under Henri IV.

The Real Tennis Room :
Considered the oldest of the three other remaining such rooms in France, its
origin goes back to the 14th century in the reign of François 1st.
This sport, the ancestor of tennis, then
became “the game of kings, the king of games”.
There are many currently used French
expressions which have their origins in Real Tennis: “qui va à
la chasse perd sa place” (he who goes hunting loses his
place), “tomber à pic” (to happen in the nick of time),
“épater la galerie” (to impress the gallery)…
These days, the Real Tennis room regularly welcomes tournaments and enables
enthusiasts of this sport to play there all year long.
Activities in the château
Horse-drawn carriage drives with commentary
:
Departure from “Porte Dorée” (Golden Gate) – Mr Pignon
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Every day: from 10.30am to 1pm and from 2.30pm to 5pm or 6pm
(following Château times).
All day long on weekends.
Further information: Les Attelages de la Forêt de
Fontainebleau
66 rue Gambetta, 77210 Avon / Tel : 01 64 22 92 61 – 06 61 50
09 20.
Price: € 4.00
Boat rowing on the Carp Pond :
On the Château’s Carp Pond
From 1st May to end of October. Subject to weather conditions,
every day except Tuesdays from 2pm to 6pm or 7pm following the
château’s closing times.
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Price :
- ½ hour : € 9
- 1 hour : € 15
Real Tennis :
Initiation and demonstration of Real Tennis in one of the
3 remaining such rooms in active usage in France (balls and
racquets provided for the initiation).
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Monday to Sunday from 8am to 10pm
Further information: Salle du Jeu de Paume du Palais National.
Tel.:01 64 22 47 67
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Practical
Information for Fontainebleau
Office de Tourisme de Fontainebleau
4, rue Royale - 77300 Fontainebleau -
Tel: 01 60 74 99 99
Fax: 01 60 74 80 22
e-mail :
info@fontainebleau-tourisme.com
For further information :
www.musee-chateau-fontainebleau.fr
Tourism Office
Tel.: 01 60 74 99 99
Reception of the Château
Tel.: 01 60 71 50 60
VISITING HOURS AND LOGISTICS
Opening days and times :
Open daily except Tuesdays
Closed on 1st January, 1st May and 25 December
Open from 9.30 am to 5pm (6pm from June to September)
Last admission 45 minutes before closure
The State Apartments are accessible to disabled persons in
wheelchairs; specific tours for blind persons or persons with impaired vision.
General visit :
State Apartments (Renaissance rooms, State
Apartments of the sovereigns and the Emperor’s Inner
Apartment, the Chinese Museum).
Audioguides can be made available for the
visit. The Museum of Napoleon 1st and the small apartments are
open on selected days, as a guided tour conducted by a Museum
agent.
Prices : (approx)
- State Apartments (Renaissance rooms, State
Apartments of the sovereigns and the Inner Apartment of the
Emperor):
- Full price : € 5,50
- Reduced price : € 4
- Free for persons under 18 years of age
- Small Apartments, Museum of Napoleon 1st and circuit
on the theme “Fontainebleau under the second Empire”:
- Full price : € 3 (per circuit)
- Reduced price : € 2,3 (per circuit)
- Free for persons under 18 years of age
- Audio guides :
€4.60 1½ hours, you are free to go and explore the courtyards
and gardens of the Château.
The façades, the courtyards, the portraits,
the grounds and the fountains all recount the brilliant court
life of the 34 sovereigns who for 8 centuries made their
hunting residence into one of the most beautiful Palaces in
France.
Another circuit allows you to discover a walk through the
streets and squares, where modest houses, noble mansions and
public buildings recount the exceptional destiny of the royal
borough.
- Full price : € 4,60
Visits are offered in French, English, German, Italian and
Japanese.
Information and rental: Visit of the State
Apartments :
Unguided, duration 1 hour 30 minutes
Tours may sometimes be available at 2.30pm from July to September (please
request information for specific dates)
Conference visits on various themes for groups and for individuals.
Visit of the Small Apartments :
Guided tour, duration 1 hour 15 minutes, in French
Dependent on service availability
Groups limited to 20 people
Visit of the Museum of Napoleon 1st :
Guided tour, duration 1 hour 15 minutes, in French
Dependent on service availability
Groups limited to 20 people
Visit on the theme “Fontainebleau under the Second Empire" :
Guided tour, duration 1 hour 15 minutes, in French
Groups limited to 20 people
Visit the domain Gardens :
Different themes for groups, and for individuals
Further information can be obtained by calling
01 60 71 70 75
The courtyards and the gardens are open daily from May to September from 9am to
7pm / in March, April and October from 9am to 6pm / from November to February
from 9am to 5pm.
Credits
for part of this
article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article
"Fontainebleau".
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The
Fontainebleau forest (lovingly referred to as “bleau”)
protected by France's Office National des Forêts comprises
25 000 hectares of forest surrounding the city of Fontainbleau
and its accompanying villages.
Going back to the 12th century it was already a former royal
hunting park often visited by walkers and horse riders

About 50 km south east of Paris, it is one of the largest and
most beautiful forests in France. Easily accessible via the A6
autoroute or a direct train from the Gare de Lyon (about 50
minutes).
Many varied activities appeal to myriads of different types of
visitors from the stroller to the alpinist.
Climbing
Its
“mini-Alps” hilly terrain and rugged landscape make it a
wonderful area for rock climbers to train for the real thing.
There’s the Ecole de l’Escalade (Climbing School) which can
help you come to grips with this exacting sport.
There are climbing circuits for all levels : (yellow, orange,
blue, red and black – from easy to extremely difficult).
Hiking
For
hikers it’s magic with kilometre after kilometre of walking
possibilities.
Purchase a special hiker’s map (Institut
Geographique National) so you can follow the paths without
getting lost… or at least being able to find your way out of
the labyrinth of trails.
Wildlife
This
little paradise is a natural reserve for wildlife with
hundreds of species of flora and fauna :
The oaks and black pine.
Bird watchers will be amazed by the variety :
six species of woodpeckers including the Black Woodpecker
Middle Spotted, but also the Grey-headed Woodpecker and many
other species of birds : Short-toed Tree-creeper, Crested Tit,
Firecrest, Woodlark, Cirl Bunting
Contacts
CENTRE D'INITIATION DE LA FORET DE
FONTAINEBLEAU,
Centre de la Faisanderie,
near boulevard Constance.
Tel. 01 64 22 72 59,
- Free documentation
AMIS DE LA FORET DE FONTAINBLEAU,
26 rue de la Cloche,
77300 Fontainebleau
Tel. 01 64 23 46 45
- Documentation
- ideas for hikes and walks in the forest.
Domain and National Museums of the
Fontainebleau Château
History
The Royal Château of Fontainebleau (in the
Seine-et-Marne département), the largest of the French royal
châteaux, introduced to France the Italian Mannerist style in
interior decoration and in gardens, and transformed them in
the translation.
The French Mannerist style of interior
decoration of the 16th century is known as the "Fontainebleau
style:" it combined sculpture, metalwork, painting, stucco and
woodwork, and outdoors the patterned garden parterre.
The Fontainebleau style combined allegorical paintings in
molded plasterwork where the framing was treated as if it were
leather or paper, slashed and rolled into scrolls and combined
with arabesques and grotesques.
Fontainbleau ideals of female beauty are
Mannerist: a small neat head on a long neck, exaggeratedly
long torso and limbs, small high breasts — almost a return to
Late Gothic beauties.
The new works at Fontainebleau were recorded
in refined and detailed engravings that circulated among
connoisseurs and artists. Through the
engravings by the "Fontainebleau school" this new style was
transmitted to other northern European centers, Antwerp
especially, and Germany, and eventually London.
The château as it is today is the work of many
monarchs, building on a structure of François I. The building
is ranged round a series of courts.
The city of Fontainebleau has grown up around the remainder of
the "Forest of Fontainebleau," a former royal hunting park.
The older château on this site was already used in the latter
part of the 12th century by Louis VII, for whom Thomas à
Becket consecrated the chapel. Fontainebleau was a favourite
residence of Philip Augustus and Louis IX.
The creator of the present edifice was
François I, under whom the architect Gilles le Breton erected
most of the buildings of the Cour Ovale, including the Porte
Dorée, its southern entrance.
The king also invited the architect Sebastiano
Serlio to France, and Leonardo da Vinci.
The "Gallery of Francis I", with its frescoes framed in stucco
by Rosso Fiorentino between 1522 and 1540, was the first great
decorated gallery built in France. Broadly speaking, at
Fontainebleau the Renaissance was introduced to France.
The Salle des Fêtes, in the reign of Henri II,
was decorated by the Italian Mannerist painters, Francesco Primaticcio and Niccolo dell’ Abbate. Benvenuto Cellini's
"Nymph of Fontainebleau," commissioned for the château, is at
the Louvre.
Another campaign of extensive construction was undertaken by
King Henri II and Catherine de' Medici, who commissioned
architects Philibert Delorme and Jean Bullant.
To the Fontainebleau of François I and Henri II, King Henri IV
added the Court that carries his name, the Cour des Princes,
with the adjoining Galerie de Diane de Poitiers and the
Galerie des Cerfs, used as a library.
A "second school of Fontainebleau" decorators,
less ambitious and original than the first, evolved from these
additional projects. Henri IV pierced the wooded park with a
1200m canal (which can be fished today) and ordered the
planting of pines, elms and fruit trees.
Napoleon I's throne room. Three hundred years later the
château had fallen into disrepair and during the French
Revolution many of the original furnishings were stolen.
What remained were sold, in the long
Revolutionary sales of the contents of all the Royal châteaux,
intended as a way of raising money for the nation and insuring
that the Bourbons could not return to their comforts.
Nevertheless, with a decade Emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte, began to transform the Château de Fontainebleau
into a symbol of his grandeur, as an alternative to empty
Versailles, with its Bourbon connotations.
At Fontainebleau Napoleon bade farewell to his
Old Guard and went into exile in 1814. With modifications of
the château's structure, including the cobblestone entrance
wide enough for his carriage, Napoleon helped make the château
the place that visitors see today.
Fontainebleau was the setting of the Second
Empire court of his nephew Napoleon III.
Philip the Fair, Henry III and Louis XIII were all born in the
palace, and the first of these kings died there.
Christina of Sweden lived there for years,
following her abdication in 1654. In 1685 Fontainebleau saw
the signing of the Edict of Fontainebleau, which revoked the
Edict of Nantes (1598).
Royal guests of the Bourbon kings were housed
at Fontainebleau: Peter the Great of Russia and Christian VII
of Denmark, and so, under Napoleon was Pope Pius VII — in 1804
when he came to consecrate the emperor Napoleon, and in
1812—1814, when he was Napoleon's prisoner.

STATE APARTMENTS
Wealth and variety of interior décors of the
royal apartments from François 1st to Napoleon III.
The Renaissance :
The décors of the François 1st Gallery, the bedroom of the
Duchess of Etampes, the Ballroom… which made of Fontainebleau
a centre of artistic influence in all of Europe.
François 1st, patron of the arts :
The patron king of Arts and Literature is evoked in the
very setting where he welcomed Rosso, Primaticcio, Cellini,
Budé…
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Henri IV and the artists of his time :
Prolific
builder, Henri IV considerably enlarged the château (court of
the Offices, Deer gallery, aviary, canal, gardens… employing
Dubois, Fréminet, Dubrueil, Jacquet…)
The Fontainebleau School and the art of the 16th century.
An in-depth study of the décors of the 16th century. How
artists come from all over Europe imagined a new decorative
system in Fontainebleau.
The evolution of the apartments of the sovereigns
- Napoleon in Fontainebleau :
The Emperor’s stays in Fontainebleau, daily life and
government.

- Celebrations and entertainment :
Hunts, tournaments, celebrations and grand ceremonies,
with an overview of Real Tennis.
- The royal hunts :
The sketches of Oudry, for a series of tapestries ordered
by Louis XV; apartments of Hunts.
The history of the château :
Tour of the exteriors to reconstitute the history of the
construction of the Palace, from the Middle Ages to the 19th
century.
SMALL APARTMENTS
Suites
of Empire furniture and daily life of the Emperor in the more
intimate setting of the Small Apartments.
The François 1st gallery :
Returning from captivity in Italy, the king had developed
a taste for the new artists of the Renaissance.
He asked Rosso et Primaticcio to come and create décors
measuring up to his desire for a “New Rome”.
The result is one of the most beautiful galleries in France,
exceptional for its frescos and its wood panelling which form
the first décor “à la française”.
The ballroom :
Built under François 1st and completed under Henri II by
Philibert Delorme, the Ballroom has recently been restored.

Originally planned as an open-air loggia, glass windows were
rapidly installed to protect it from harsh weather.
One can admire the frescos full of movement of Primaticcio and
his student Niccolo dell’Abate, as well as the splendid
marquetry of the flooring designed under Louis Philippe,
reproducing the coffered ceiling richly decorated in silver
and gold…
TheTrinity Chapel :
Exceptional for its frescos painted under Henri IV by
Martin Fréminet, one of Michelangelo’s little-known emulators,
the chapel holds the memory of Louis XV’s wedding with Marie
Leszczinska in 1725 and of Louis Napoleon’s baptism, future
Napoleon III in 1810.
The Queen’s Grand Cabinet and the Queen’s Boudoir :
With a charming décor created for Marie-Antoinette, these
two rooms mark the height of French taste’s glory in the 18th
century, with the subtle alliance of neoclassical woodworks
with Riesener’s mother of pearl furniture.
The Council Room :
Exceptional rockwork décor in pink and blue camaieu
painted by Carl Van Loo and Jean Baptiste Pierre, with the
ceiling by Boucher symbolising the Four Seasons. This room
hosted the King’s councils, and later the Emperor’s.
The Throne Room :
Formerly the King’s bedroom from Henri IV to Louis XVI,
this room was converted into the Throne room by Napoleon, who
furnished it following the directives of the new imperial
etiquette.

It is the only remaining Throne room in France retaining its
original furniture.
Napoleon 1st’s Imperial Inner Apartment :
Napoleon resided in these private apartments, which have
just been refitted following fifteen years of restoration.
One can discover the very beautiful bedroom of the Emperor and
his display bed, his study where he worked during his nights
of insomnia, his bathroom and the drawing-room which became
famous since he signed his abdication there in 1814.
The Museum of Napoleon 1st :
Installed in the Louis XV wing of the Château, in the
Princes’ ancient apartments, the museum presents objects and
memorabilia evoking the life of the Emperor (anointment,
military campaigns, birth of the King of Rome) and of his
family: Madame Mère (Napoleon’s mother) and the brothers and
sisters of the Emperor, Joseph, Louis, Jérôme, Elisa, Pauline
and Caroline.
The Chinese Museum :
The Chinese collections gathered by the Empress Eugénie
are exceptional by both their origins and their sheer
quantity.
In 1863, Napoleon III’s wife had the ground
floor of the large pavilion redesigned in order to host her
personal collection of objects from the Far East.
The restoration undertaken in 1984 has
highlighted to its advantage the Napoleon III décor of the
rooms, designed as a museum, but also as a Second Empire salon
with its red and green harmony…
...the courtyards, gardens and parks
(Diane's garden ) The courtyards and gardens are open every
day from May to September from 9am to 7pm.
In March, April and October, from 9am to 6pm.
From November to February, from 9am to 5pm.

THE COURTYARDS
The
Palace buildings are organised around five main courtyards,
and the complexity of the plan reveals the various different
work campaigns that were undertaken here. Indeed, each area
has several names according to the different periods.
Arrival by the Court of the White Horse or Court of
Farewells :
The main façade, punctuated by high-roofed pavilions,
dates in part back to the 16th century. It was
here, at the foot of the famous double horse-shoe staircase
built in 1634 by Jean Androuet Du Cerceau, that Napoleon made
his celebrated farewell to his guard before leaving for the
Island of Elba.

Court of the Fountain :
The buildings bear witness of several periods of
construction: the gallery of François 1st, the terrace of
Henri IV, the apartment of Henri II, the elegant building of
Primaticcio with its two right-banister staircases, facing the
large pavilion of Gabriel built in 1750.
The large dogs of Fô mark the former entrance
to Empress Eugénie’s Chinese rooms. Near the carp pond is a
fountain which used to give very pure water, the usage of
which was reserved for the king.
Rising in the middle of the carp-filled pond
is a pavilion first built under Henri IV, then rebuilt by
Louis XIV and restored by Napoleon 1st. Light meals were
served there during royal outings.
The Oval Court :
The oldest courtyard in the Château lies in an area
formerly occupied by the ancient 12th century fortified
castle, of which only the dungeon remains.
Primitively oval, this courtyard was opened by Henri IV who
had the large domed portal elevated in 1601 to allow him a
monumental entrance.
The portal took on the name of Gate of the
Baptistery, or Dauphine Gate, following the Baptism of Louis
XIII which took place in the courtyard in 1601, the royal
Court having fled Paris which was being ravaged by the plague.
Court of the Offices :
Said to be the court of Henri IV, in brick and rough-cast,
built between 1606 and 1609 to shelter the offices and the
kitchens by separating them from the main buildings to avoid
fire risks..
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