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# ''Holland rescued from the [[Christoph Bernhard von Galen|bishop of Munster]], 1665''
# ''Holland rescued from the [[Christoph Bernhard von Galen|bishop of Munster]], 1665''
# ''Relief of the people during the {{ill|French famine of 1661{{!}}famine|fr|Crise de l'avènement}}, 1662''
# ''Relief of the people during the {{ill|French famine of 1661{{!}}famine|fr|Crise de l'avènement}}, 1662''
# ''Reversal of the [[Corsican Guard Affair|Corsican Guard's affront in Rome]], 1664''
# ''Reparation of the [[Corsican Guard Affair|Corsican Guard's affront in Rome]], 1664''
# ''The [[History of crossings of the Rhine|crossing of the Rhine]] in front of the enemy, 1672''
# ''The [[History of crossings of the Rhine|crossing of the Rhine]] in front of the enemy, 1672''
# ''The King [[Siege of Maastricht (1673)|seizes Maastricht]] in thirteen days, 1673''
# ''The King [[Siege of Maastricht (1673)|seizes Maastricht]] in thirteen days, 1673''

Revision as of 19:37, 23 October 2021

Hall of Mirrors, Palace of Versailles

The Hall of Mirrors (French: Grande Galerie, Galerie des Glaces, Galerie de Louis XIV) is a grand Baroque style gallery and one of the most emblematic rooms in the royal Palace of Versailles near Paris, France. The grandiose ensemble of the Hall and its adjoining salons was intended to illustrate the power of the absolutist monarch Louis XIV. Located on the first floor (piano nobile) of the palace's central body, it faces west towards the Palace Gardens.[1][2] The Hall of Mirrors has been the scene of events of great historic significance, including the Proclamation of the German Empire and the signing of the Treaty of Versailles.

Cultural and historical background

Construction

The royal apartments adjacent to the Hall of Mirrors

In 1623 King Louis XIII ordered the construction of a modest two-story hunting lodge at Versailles, which he soon enlarged to a château from 1631 to 1634. His son Louis XIV declared the site his future permanent residence in 1661 and ordered the transformation into an extensive residence in several stages and on a grandiose scale. The palace was to provide ideal settings for rest and retreat but it also had to attain a new quality of representation as the future seat of Europe's greatest absolutist royal court and government of supreme authority, residence of choice for the aristocratic society and arena for elaborate state festivals and ceremonies, Europe's centre of culture, art and entertainment. During the early expansion phase Louis Le Vau added the Forecourt (1662) and the “Le Vau Envelope” (1668 to 1670), encased the old château and added two new wings in the north and south. The new wings towered over the original western building by the garden. The space in between was a terrace supported by arcades. The buildings of the “Le Vau Envelope” included the king's apartments in the north and the queen's apartments in the south.[3]

The Hall of Mirrors was built during the third building stage between 1678 and 1684 and was to replace a large terrace and several smaller salons facing the gardens. The terrace was originally situated directly outside of the King's and the Queen's apartments. The terrace was considered to be a rather misplaced architectural element and exposed to the elements, reducing its utility. Eventually it was decided to demolish it and architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart was tasked with the design development and the construction of the Mirror Hall Gallery and artist Charles Le Brun received the honor to create the interior decorative apparatus.[4][5]

The garden facade of the Corps de logis was built in a straight front and essentially received its current appearance. The Hall of Mirrors is flanked at the far ends by the Salon of War (Salon de la guerre) in the north and the Salon of Peace (Salon de la paix) in the south, respectively. The Mirror Gallery connects to the two Salons, which were assigned to and incorporated into the king's apartments in the north and the queen's apartments in the south. Both Salons are accessible via the Mirror Gallery through wide opening passageways. The Hall and the two Salons were identically furnished and decorated and form a stylistic and functional unit. The exterior walls of the Salons date from the time of Le Vau's encasings of the old château and were given their current appearance after the installation of the Mirror Hall by Hardouin-Mansart.[6][7]

The Hall of Mirrors is—besides the Palace Chapel, completed in the early 18th century, the Court Opera and the Galerie des Batailles—one of the largest rooms in the palace. It is 73 m (240 ft) long and 10.50 m (34.4 ft) deep.[8] With its height of 12.30 m (40.4 ft) it reaches to the Attic floor of the Corps de Logis. The square windows on the upper floor, which can be seen from the outside, only serve aesthetic purposes, as there are no rooms inside. The installation of any kind of fireplaces was never contemplated as the Hall of Mirrors was too large to effectively be heated.[9][10]

Arts and decoration

Sculptured Guéridons replaced the 1689 melted down silver furniture.

The Mirror Hall's 17 windows open in the direction of the park. On the opposite inside wall of the Hall are 17 equally large mirrors, that are composed of more than 350 individual mirror surfaces. On the one hand, the mirrors had an aesthetic function, as the mirror image of the garden depicted the exterior of the castle into the interior of the building and reflected the candlelight in the evening. On the other hand, the mirrors also conveyed the king's wealth and the efficiency of the French economy in a subtle way. Mirror glass was an expensive luxury product in the 17th century and could only be produced with great effort. The manufacture of the mirror surfaces was the first major order for the Manufacture royale de glaces de miroirs, a glass factory founded by Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the later Compagnie de Saint-Gobain, with which the Venetian monopoly on the manufacture of mirrors in Europe was broken.[11][12]

Much of the original solid silver furniture of the Hall of Mirrors, famous at the time, was soon lost, particularly the silver Guéridons (tables), which were melted down and coined by order of Louis XIV in 1689 to finance the War of the League of Augsburg. Today's furniture was manufactured during the 19th century after most of the original furnishings were lost during the French Revolution.

Sculptures

The gilded bronze capitals of the Rouge de Rance marble pilasters are decorated with the Fleur-de-lis and Gallic roosters. The gilded bronze trophies, that adorn the green marble Pier glasses, were manufactured by goldsmith Pierre Ladoyreau.

The marble and porphyry busts of eight Roman emperors are accompanied by sculptures of Greek and Roman deities and Muses, such as Bacchus, Venus (Venus of Arles), Modesty, Hermes, Urania, Nemesis and Diana (Diana of Versailles). The latter, moved to the Louvre in 1798, was replaced by a Diana sculpted by René Frémin for the gardens of the Château de Marly until the restoration of the Hall of Mirrors during 2004 to 2007, which in turn was replaced by a copy of the original Diana.[13][14]


Ceiling

The ceiling combines with the mirrors and the light from the western windows to confer on the room its unique character. Nine large and numerous smaller paintings, most of them on canvas using marouflage and the rest directly painted on masonry, are dedicated to the idolization Louis XIV as the Sun King and to the successes of the first two decades of his personal rule (starting in 1661). Charles Le Brun, "the greatest French artist of all time" according to king Louis XIV,[citation needed] directed the ceiling paintings. The central scene is titled The King rules by Himself, highlighting Louis's claim to absolute power and his adversarial stance to rival European powers, the main three of which (the Holy Roman Empire, the United Provinces, and Spain) are depicted on the opposite side of the same panel. The themes of the larger panels center on the Franco-Dutch War of 1672-1678, while the other scenes include episodes of the prior War of Devolution of 1667-1668 and domestic achievements.

According to a contemporary anecdote, the decoration of the eastern wall with mirrors was a ploy by architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart to prevent Le Brun from having even more opportunities to impress Louis with his work.[15][16]

The narrative sequence of the central scenes starts with the formation of the German (Imperial)-Spanish-Dutch alliance in 1672 on the Northern end, and ends with the unraveling of that alliance with the Dutch acceptance of a separate piece with France in 1678. The full list is a compendium of key propaganda themes of the early 1680s, with titles provided by poets Boileau and Racine in their capacity as the regime's official historians:

  1. Alliance of Germany and Spain with Holland, 1672
  2. Holland rescued from the bishop of Munster, 1665
  3. Relief of the people during the famine [fr], 1662
  4. Reparation of the Corsican Guard's affront in Rome, 1664
  5. The crossing of the Rhine in front of the enemy, 1672
  6. The King seizes Maastricht in thirteen days, 1673
  7. Defeat of the Turks in Hungary by the King's troops, 1664
  8. The folly of duelling abolished, 1662
  9. The precedence of France acknowledged by Spain, 1662
  10. The King gives his orders to simultaneously attack four of Holland's best-defended strongholds, 1672
  11. The King ramps up military preparations on land and sea, 1672
  12. The restoration of France's naval power, 1663
  13. War against Spain for the Queen's rights, 1667
  14. The reformation of the justice system, 1667
  15. The King rules by Himself, 1661
  16. The pomp of France's neighboring powers
  17. Order restored to the kingdom's finances, 1662
  18. The peace concluded in Aix-la-Chapelle, 1668
  19. Protection awarded to the fine arts, 1663
  20. Franche-Comté conquered once again, 1674
  21. Resolution to undertake war against Holland, 1671
  22. Establishment of the royal institution at Les Invalides, 1674
  23. Acquisition of Dunkirk, 1662
  24. Embassies sent from the confines of the Earth
  25. Takeover of the city and citadel of Ghent in six days, 1678
  26. Spanish actions countered by the takeover of Ghent
  27. Renewal of the alliance with the Swiss [fr], 1663
  28. Safety of the City of Paris [fr], 1665
  29. The junction of the two seas, 1667
  30. Holland accepts peace and leaves the alliance with Germany and Spain, 1678

Functions

Louis XIV receiving the Doge of Genoa at Versailles on 15 May 1685
The signing of peace to end World War 1 in the Hall of Mirrors, 28th June 1919

During the 17th century, the Hall's main purpose was to serve as a kind of covered promenade for Louis XIV's visit to the chapel. He entered the gallery at least once a day and from 1701, the king's bedroom lay behind the middle wall of the gallery. Courtiers assembled to meet the king and members of the royal family and might make a particular request by intoning: "Sire, Marly?". This was the manner in which nobles were able to obtain a much sought-after invitation to one of the king's house parties at Marly-le-Roi, a villa Louis XIV had built north of Versailles on the route to Saint-Germain-en-Laye.

Its central location and size predestined the Hall of Mirrors as a place for court festivities such as the wedding of the Duke of Burgundy (the Petit Dauphin) with Marie Adélaïde of Savoy, the wedding of Louis, Dauphin of France and Maria Teresa of Spain in 1645 and the wedding of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette in 1770. In the successive reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, the Hall of Mirrors continued to serve for family and court functions. Embassies, births, and marriages were held in this room. The most celebrated event of the 18th century on 25 February 1745 was the celebrated Yew Tree Ball. It was during this costume ball that Louis XV, who was dressed as a yew tree, met Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson d'Étiolles, who was costumed as Diana, goddess of the hunt. Jeanne-Antoinette, who became Louis XV's mistress, is better known to history as the Marquise de Pompadour.

Foreign audiences were granted, including that of the Doge of Genoa in 1685 and the embassy of King Mahmud I of Turkey in 1742. However, of all the events that transpired in this room during the reign of Louis XIV, the Siamese Embassy of 1685 to 1686 has been cited as the most opulent. At this time, the Hall of Mirrors and the grand appartements were still decorated with the original silver furniture. In its heyday, over 3,000 candles were used to light the Hall of Mirrors. In February 1715, Louis XIV held his last embassy in the Hall when he received Mehemet Reza Bey, ambassador of the Shah of Persia.[17][18]

On 18 January 1871 during the siege of Paris at the conclusion of the Franco-Prussian War, the Prussian king, William I, was, led by Otto von Bismarck, declared German emperor — thus establishing the German Empire — in the Hall of Mirrors by the assembled German princes and lords. The choice fell among other things like Versailles being the headquarters of the united German armies, on the Hall of Mirrors because its ceiling paintings glorified the conquest of German territories by France. The French nation regarded this ceremony as deeply humiliating. The event greatly contributed to the further accretion of the Franco-German enmity.[19] A few decades later French Prime Minister Clemenceau consciously chose the Hall of Mirrors as the site to sign the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919, that officially ended World War I, to dismantle the German Empire in the room where it had been proclaimed.[20][21][22]

The Hall of Mirrors remains reserved for official ceremonies of the French Republic. Notable events during the 20th century were the reception of US-President John Fitzgerald Kennedy and his wife by Charles De Gaulle, the reception of the Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi by Valéry Giscard d'Estaing in 1974 or the invitation of representatives of the Group of Seven summit by President François Mitterrand from June 4 to 6, 1982.

References

  1. ^ David Sinclair (31 July 2011). Hall Of Mirrors. Random House. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-4464-7356-6.
  2. ^ Nicholas Boyle (28 February 2008). German Literature: A Very Short Introduction. OUP Oxford. pp. 16–. ISBN 978-0-19-157863-2.
  3. ^ "Palace of Versailles | palace, Versailles, France". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  4. ^ Joanna Banham (May 1997). Encyclopedia of Interior Design. Routledge. pp. 730–. ISBN 978-1-136-78758-4.
  5. ^ "La galerie des Glaces". Versailles Tourisme. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  6. ^ "Palace of Versailles - The Hall of Mirrors". Chateau Versailles. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  7. ^ Kimball, Fiske (1940). "Mansart and le Brun in the Genesis of the Grande Galerie de Versailles". The Art Bulletin. 22. Informa UK Limited: 1–6. doi:10.1080/00043079.1940.11409005.
  8. ^ "La galerie des Glaces" (PDF). Chateau Versailles. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  9. ^ RICCARDO BIANCHINI (11 February 2019). "Palace of Versailles". In Exhibit. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Hall of Mirrors". David Grubin Productions. 12 September 2006. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  11. ^ Felipe Chaimovich (25 September 2009). "Mirrors of Society: Versailles and the Use of Flat Reflected Images". Visual Resources. 24 (4). Informa UK Limited: 353–367. doi:10.1080/01973760802442756. S2CID 194077148.
  12. ^ B. Velde (21 January 2013). Seventeenth–Century Varec Glass from the Great Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 563–572. doi:10.1002/9781118314234.ch26. ISBN 9781118314234.
  13. ^ "Restoration of the Hall of Mirrors gets under way" (PDF). Vinci. 1 July 2004. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  14. ^ "The "Grand Versailles" project". Chateau Versailles. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  15. ^ Marcia B. Hall (2019). The Power of Color: Five Centuries of European Painting. Yale University Press. pp. 148–. ISBN 978-0-300-23719-1.
  16. ^ Gillian Perry; Colin Cunningham (1999). Academies, Museums, and Canons of Art. Yale University Press. pp. 86–. ISBN 978-0-300-07743-8.
  17. ^ "The Hall of Mirrors at The Palace of Versailles". Study com. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  18. ^ Ronald S. Love (27 April 2016). "Rituals of Majesty: France, Siam, and Court Spectacle in Royal Image-Building at Versailles in 1685 and 1686". Canadian Journal of History. 31 (2). University of Toronto Press: 171–198. doi:10.3138/cjh.31.2.171.
  19. ^ "Proclamation of the German Empire, 1871". Palace of Versailles. 22 November 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  20. ^ "1919 - XXth century - Over the centuries - Versailles 3d". www.versailles3d.com. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  21. ^ Michael Stürmer (1 July 2007). "Versailles, ein Schicksalsort Europas". HISTORY com. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  22. ^ Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide; Bertrand Rondot (16 April 2018). Visitors to Versailles: From Louis XIV to the French Revolution. Metropolitan Museum of Art. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-58839-622-8.

Further reading

Media related to Hall of Mirrors (Palace of Versailles) at Wikimedia Commons 48°48′17.4″N 2°7′13.2″E / 48.804833°N 2.120333°E / 48.804833; 2.120333