Monday, 3 June 2013

Rueil-Malmaison, France

 
Associated forever with Mme Rose de Beauharnais, otherwise known as Empress Joséphine, the first wife of Napoléon Bonaparte, Château de Malmaison  is situated in the commune of Rueil-Malmaison, just outside Paris (about 12 km from the centre of the French capital). Malmaison (a name first documented in 1244), signifies a house of some notoriety; it seems that for a time it was a bandits lair, a den of Norman invaders who carried out raids on the surrounding area. Despite its unfortunate name however, a fabulous destine befell this humble manor house. Joséphine acquired it in 1799, while her husband was away on his Egyptian campaign, and between 1800 and 1802 the little chateau became, together with the Tuileries, the headquarters of the French government where the Consulate ministers met frequently.  After the divorce of the imperial couple in 1809, Napoleon bequeathed this property to Joséphine together with all its treasures and she lived there till the end of her life.

Château de Malmaison

Château de Malmaison, seen from the landscape garden
The room of Empress Joséphine decorated like a tent with her bed where she died in 1814


Pendulum Clock "The chariots of Telemachus"

 

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