Sun, May 19, 9:46 AM CDT

Chateau d'Azay-le-Rideau

Photography Architecture posted on Apr 16, 2015
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Description


The Chateau d'Azay-le-Rideau is set on an island in the middle of the Indre river. Some historical information from Wikipedia: "The current chateau of Azay-le-Rideau occupies the site of a former feudal castle. During the 12th century, the local seigneur Ridel (or Rideau) d'Azay, a knight in the service of Philip II Augustus, built a fortress here to protect the Tours to Chinon road where it crossed the river Indre. However, this original medieval castle fell victim to the rivalry between Burgundian and Armagnac factions during the Hundred Years' War. In 1418, the future Charles VII passed through Azay-le-Rideau as he fled from Burgundian occupied Paris to the loyal Armagnac stronghold of Bourges. Angered by the insults of the Burgundian troops occupying the town, the dauphin ordered his own army to storm the castle. The 350 soldiers inside were all executed and the castle itself burnt to the ground. For centuries, this fate was commemorated in the town's name of Azay-le-Brûlé (literally Azay the Burnt), which remained in use until the 18th century. The castle remained in ruins until 1518, when the land was acquired by Gilles Berthelot, the Mayor of Tours and Treasurer-General of the King's finances. Desiring a residence to reflect his wealth and status, Berthelot set about reconstructing the building in a way that would incorporate its medieval past alongside the latest architectural styles of the Italian renaissance. Although the chateau's purpose was to be largely residential, defensive fortifications remained important symbols of prestige, and so Berthelot was keen to have them for his new castle. He justified his request to the King, Francis I, by an exaggerated description of the many 'public thieves, footpads and other vagabonds, evildoers committing affray, disputes, thefts, larcenies, outrages, extortions and sundry other evils' which threatened unfortified towns such as Azay-le-Rideau. Berthelot's duties meant that he was frequently absent from the chateau, so the responsibility for supervising the building works fell to his wife, Philippa Lesbahy. These took time, since it was difficult to lay solid foundations in the damp ground of this island in the Indre, and the chateau had to be raised on stilts driven into the mud. Even once the foundations were laid, construction still progressed slowly, as much of the stone for the chateau came from the Saint-Aignan quarry, which was famous for its hard-wearing rock but was also around 100 km (62 mi) away, meaning that the heavy blocks had to be transported to Azay-le-Rideau by boat. The chateau was still incomplete in 1527, when the execution of Jacques de Beaune, (the chief minister in charge of royal finances and cousin to Berthelot) forced Gilles to flee the country. Possibly fearing the exposure of his own financial misdemeanours, he went into exile first in Metz in Lorraine, and later in Cambrai, where he died just two years later. Disregarding the pleas of Berthelot's wife Philippa, Francis I confiscated the unfinished chateau and, in 1535, gave it to Antoine Raffin, one of his knights-at-arms. Raffin undertook only minor renovations in the chateau, and so the building works remained incomplete, with only the south and west wings of the planned quadrilateral ever being built. Thus, the chateau preserved the distinctive, but accidental, L-shape which it retains to this day." Please zoom.

Comments (19)


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Hendesse

9:52AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

A very pretty water castle. Fantastic shot, I like the reflections.

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rangeriderrichard

9:58AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Wonderful shot, great reflections and history info!

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aksirp

10:11AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

J'étais là 1979, first holiday with my boyfriend - he is my husband now;-) beautiful landscape and historical buildings there! superb capture of this castle!

photosynthesis

10:36AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

I don't get the connection...

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Jean_C

10:42AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Superb capture of this wonderful castle!

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SunriseGirl

10:43AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Gorgeous shot! Thanks for the mini history lesson too. I always love those.

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miwi

10:45AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Excellent shot,thanks for the info!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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durleybeachbum

10:51AM | Thu, 16 April 2015

It is quite something! I wonder if they get rising damp.

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Glendaw

12:11PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Awesome looking castle, landscape, reflections and interesting information.

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Juliette.Gribnau

12:22PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

beautiful castle and reflections

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jayfar

1:08PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

A great shot and a lovely structure.

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jeroni

5:48PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Fantastic colors and shadow.Wonderful photo.

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MrsRatbag

7:04PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

It's lovely from this angle! Super shot!

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mtdana

11:22PM | Thu, 16 April 2015

Excellent historical account - very interesting image!!!

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CavalierLady

7:14AM | Fri, 17 April 2015

What an impressive place and history, very nicely done.

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netot

12:17AM | Sat, 18 April 2015

This is awesome! Very interesting text, too

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auntietk

8:04PM | Sat, 18 April 2015

Unfinished and/or ruined ... somehow more interesting than a standard job well done. :P I like the architectural details, particularly those corner towers, and the way the fancy bits are toned down by those lovely, mostly plain, walls. So enjoyable to view!

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anahata.c

11:35AM | Sun, 19 April 2015

I'm sure I quoted this in your Versailles uploads, but it bears repeating...Mark Twain said, before he saw Versailles, that he only felt revulsion for Versailles, as it had oppressed many people to make that huge building and all its gardens, for the sake of some highly rich people. But when he saw it, his negativity melted at the sight of its grandeur. I think castles can be the same way. These were after all fortresses built to protect their inhabitants or the area surrounding (like this, protecting a road and I assume a river, which, in those days, could be a key to access to a whole region). So they represented power in its most absolute form, where the people who were subjugated by these leaders could be treated brutally. But to see the 'remains' is stunning---and I'm only saying that from a photograph. Your vision has everything to do with it. The angle shows off the squat thickness of it (short side) and the length (long side). But moreso it captures the massivity of it, sitting there like a huge slab, rocklike and impenetrable. Yet that slab is articulated with beautiful windows, spires, graceful steep roofing and so on, making it ornate and splendid rather than monolithic. And you present it with an ample shot of its reflections, which are like glass in contrast to that formidable stone. With a nearly white sky (it has washes of purple, but its mostly white). Your shot makes it a bold statement, but with a poetry that the concept of 'castle' wasn't supposed to have. Bold but delicate, in other words. And the brightness of the walls, in your treatment, makes it grab us. Fine job, Claude. You got the contradictions and grandeur of the place equally.

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danapommet

11:21PM | Sun, 10 May 2015

I have seen photos of this Chateau before and it still impresses me each time. Nice catch of the reflection also!


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