The topics of this blog are Armand-Jean du Plessis, Cardinal Duke of Richelieu, and the IDEAL CITY built on his command next to his magnificent CHÂTEAU on the borders of Touraine, Anjou and Poitou, in France.

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Press release on the exhibitions 'Richelieu to Richelieu'

This long pdf is the official press release on the exhibitions on Richelieu being put on at the Beaux-Arts museums of Orléans and Tours, together with the Municipal Museum in Richelieu itself.

Read on  ....   maybe better to download and print off from the scribd document below!
or, perhaps, use the 'full screen' button at the top of the Scribd window.
DossierPresse Richelieu 01

An organised visit to see the newly-restored battle scenes of the Louis XIII and his cardinal-duc, 19 March 2011

The local association, Richelieu 21 , has organised a coach trip to see the six canvases of this series of twelve, originally from the galerie of the Château de Richelieu (now long gone), that are to be exhibited at the municipal art museums of Tours and Orléans. The day out takes place on Saturday 19 March 2011.  Six more paintings are to be exhibited in the cité idéale de Richelieu itself - no coach trip required!


L’exposition temporaire porte sur le Château,  l’architecture, les antiques et les jardins, ainsi que la galerie des batailles.
The temporary exhibition features the château, the architecture, the antiquities and the gardens, as well as the gallery of battles....

L’exposition temporaire donne accès à la reconstitution du cabinet du roi et de la reine au Château de Richelieu, mobilier, peintures…
The other temporary exhibition allows examination of the reconstitution of the King's and Queen's apartments at the château de Richelieu, furniture and paintings....

The exhibition Richelieu to Richelieu.....

If you were to be interested, print and fill out the pdf form below and send it off to the organisers.
Rev Layout 2 ToursOrleans

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

Is all hope of the restoration of Richelieu station and the train to Chinon lost?

The station clock stands at eight minutes to three, accurate twice a day....

Locomotives magnificent and humble....

Can a bicycle track to Chinon be a replacement?
the track returns to the landscape 2010
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Saturday, 1 January 2011

Two hour-long TV programmes on Richelieu on Tours TV

If one clicks HERE one can view two hour-long programmes on Richelieu, the man and the town.
They principally concern the restorations of the twelve huge battle scenes taken into the care of Versailles at the demolition of the Château de Richelieu itself in the 1840s.
The paintings have been painstakingly restored (some are still in process), and finally three will he housed in the art museum of Orleans, three in Tours and six in the town of Richelieu itself.

The two programmes are in the series 'INSITU' and are called
"Richelieu à Richelieu"
and may be called up from this web page.




of course they are in French...
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Thursday, 23 December 2010

The introduction to 'Cinq Mars' by Alfred de Vigny

Alfred de Vigny 1797 - 1863
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 or
"A conspiracy under Louis XIII"

This book written by Alfred de Vigny and published in 1826 starts with a bewitching description of Touraine.
Many say that it has the best portrait of the all-powerful cardinal duc de Richelieu, although every literary portrait seems to have its own political agenda, this one born of the 1820s.

"Do you know that charming part of our country which has been called the garden of France—that spot where, amid verdant plains watered by wide streams, one inhales the purest air of heaven?

If you have travelled through fair Touraine in summer, you have no doubt followed with enchantment the peaceful Loire; you have regretted the impossibility of determining upon which of its banks you would choose to dwell with your beloved. On its right bank one sees valleys dotted with white houses surrounded by woods, hills yellow with vines or white with the blossoms of the cherry-tree, walls covered with honeysuckles, rose-gardens, from which pointed roofs rise suddenly. Everything reminds the traveller either of the fertility of the land or of the antiquity of its monuments; and everything interests him in the work of its busy inhabitants.

Nothing has proved useless to them; it seems as if in their love for so beautiful a country—the only province of France never occupied by foreigners—they have determined not to lose the least part of its soil, the smallest grain of its sand. Do you fancy that this ruined tower is inhabited only by hideous night-birds? No; at the sound of your horse's hoofs, the smiling face of a young girl peeps out from the ivy, whitened with the dust from the road. If you climb a hillside covered with vines, a light column of smoke shows you that there is a chimney at your feet; for the very rock is inhabited, and families of vine-dressers breathe in its caverns, sheltered at night by the kindly earth which they laboriously cultivate during the day. The good people of Touraine are as simple as their life, gentle as the air they breathe, and strong as the powerful earth they dig. Their countenances, like their characters, have something of the frankness of the true people of St. Louis; their chestnut locks are still long and curve around their ears, as in the stone statues of our old kings; their language is the purest French, with neither slowness, haste, nor accent—the cradle of the language is there, close to the cradle of the monarchy.

But the left bank of the stream has a more serious aspect; in the distance you see Chambord, which, with its blue domes and little cupolas, appears like some great city of the Orient; there is Chanteloup, raising its graceful pagoda in the air. Near these a simpler building attracts the eyes of the traveller by its magnificent situation and imposing size; it is the chateau of Chaumont. Built upon the highest hill of the shore, it frames the broad summit with its lofty walls and its enormous towers; high slate steeples increase their loftiness, and give to the building that conventual air, that religious form of all our old chateaux, which casts an aspect of gravity over the landscape of most of our provinces. Black and tufted trees surround this ancient mansion, resembling from afar the plumes that encircled the hat of King Henry. At the foot of the hill, connected with the chateau by a narrow path, lies a pretty village, whose white houses seem to have sprung from the golden sand; a chapel stands halfway up the hill; the lords descended and the villagers ascended to its altar-the region of equality, situated like a neutral spot between poverty and riches, which have been too often opposed to each other in bitter conflict."
le château de Chaumont
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for the complete work:

Merry Christmas

be so good as to click 'ere/ faites un déclic ici s.v.p.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GkHNNPM7pJA
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Joyeux fêtes 2010

'absolutism grabs the steering-wheel'
Msgr. Henri Proust
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Thursday, 16 December 2010

Nearly mid-winter

Caspar David Friedrich
September 5, 1774 – May 7, 1840


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Thursday, 2 December 2010

The town's planning development proposals are revised

 - le Plan Local d'Urbanisme -
(or PLU)
The development plan for the Cité Ideale de Richelieu and its modest conurbations has been the subject of reconsideration and updating by the minicipality.  The policy results have just been published by the townhall for public consultation.  
Until today's revisions, the planning directions for the town were the consequences of a policy of protection outlined in the 1960s and 80s.  This new 2010 revision brings these policies up-to-date and corrects those aspects of development policy that were found to be either counter-productive or to have unforeseen negative qualities.

But when? - O when? - are they going to complete the longed-for by-pass sector whose alignment is established but incomplete.  Meanwhile every Euro-truck in France grinds past the walls of the town.  Look at page three below to see the problem.
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click on each image if you want to read on....

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Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Our Mayor - no longer a secretary of state after Sarko's reshuffle

(JPG)
With the reshuffle of the cabinet of President Sarkozy on 14 November 2010, our Maire, 
M. Hervé Novelli, now only the



found himself out of a post.  He remains a member of parliament and of course, much the most significant for us,
Mayor of Richelieu.

It is not easy to remain at the pinnacle of power in the centralised French state.  The more impressive that Armand Jean cardinal duc de Richelieu stayed at this sharp pinnacle for more than twenty years, albeit in the seventeenth century.  But not so bad either for M. Novelli to be compared with his great predecessor.
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•••

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

The avenues of the parc in november

The late november sunshine falling on the algae on the trunks of the windswept trees of the park's avenues bathe the entire scene with a green light, while other visitors walk the dog.

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Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Henri Proust now has an I-pod touch g4

Hello.
For the first time a blog post has been made from a handheld device operating on a wi-fi system, in this particular case in France.

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Friday, 12 November 2010

....still blogging....

Although the great eponymous cardinal duc is almost of iconic status representing La France for the anglo-saxon world, he is far from the only French icon.  
Here are the Citroën DS (Déesse!) 19 Pallas and the liner La France at Le Havre - in the hey-day of the novelle vague* 1960s.
Nice drawing isn't it?
*strictly 1958 - 1964
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