Chivalric Orders
King Edward III of England, who started the Hundred Years War with France (more accurately one hundred and eighteen) founded the Chivalric Order of the Garter. The duke of Burgundy who supported the English in their wars against France founded the Chivalric Order of The Golden Fleece.
National Joan of Arc Day
Joan of Arc Day of is celebrated in France the second Sunday in May. Rightly so. Many of our heroes and heroines turn out to have feet of clay but not Joan who gains in stature the more we know about her. The fate of France was decided in the Touraine where Joan’s epic journey started. Chinon, Orléans and Loches played a crucial part in its history.
The Virgin and Child with St Anne - Clos Lucé
This image needs no introduction. It’s the Virgin Mary with the baby Jesus sitting on her mother’s lap in a very awkward position that’s for sure. It may be a trick of the light but it looks as if Saint Anne’s head was added later, it seems somehow detached as if she is a figment of Mary’s imagination or a ghost but if art is anything, it’s subjective.
The Oratory, Clos Luce
When Anne of Brittany’s husband, Charles VIII, was away she preferred to live at Clos Lucé as opposed to Château Amboise. Away from the hustle and bustle of Court it was quiet here. Anne needed quiet to grieve the loss of all her seven children.
Clos Luce Staircase
This image shows the tapestry in the staircase at Clos Lucé. It looks to be a small part of a much larger tapestry. Eagle eyed visitors note that the left hand side has been cut.
42 years of The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
We couldn’t let the 42nd anniversary of the first broadcast of Douglas Adams Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy go by without a mention. Why the number 42? Stephen Fry, a close friend of Douglas, could, but won’t, tell us. He is the only one who knows how supercomputer Deep Thought came up with 42 as the ‘Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything’. OR IS HE?
The view from Marguerite's Bedroom
Marguerite de Navarre, sister of Francis I, had a lovely view from her bedroom window in Chateau Clos Lucé. She could just see St Hubert’s chapel peeping between the trees. This image somehow catches the essence of Amboise and its lovely light.
Marguerite’s Bedroom at Clos Lucé
In 1499, six-year-old Marguerite, her four-year-old brother François and their mother Louise of Savoy joined the court in Amboise. Referring to themselves as The Trinity, they lived in Clos Lucé for nine years, six years before Leonardo moved in. Marguerite and Leonardo were her brother’s closest confidants.