Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

Philippe d'Orléans

Philippe d'Orléans was a main player in ridding France of the monarchy. Just thirty-seven years after his triumph, by a never imagined quirk of Fate, his son became King of France.

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Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

Marie-Adélaïde de Bourbon

In 1789, on the eve of the French Revolution, a portrait of Marie-Adélaïde, dressed in white, her head resting on her hand, her arm supported by a pillow, was painted by her protégée Louise Vigée-Le Brun. It’s hard to read her expression. Perhaps looking at Le Brun with affection?

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Mark Playle Mark Playle

Merry Christmas

We would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and all the best for 2022.

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Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

Marie-Amélie of Bourbon, Queen of the French

Marie-Amélie, born near Naples, was the tenth of eighteen children. It was intended she would marry the future king of France, her first cousin the Dauphin Louis Joseph, son of her mother’s sister, Marie Antoinette, but he died of tuberculosis age seven.

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Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

Who was Helene of Mecklenburg

In our previous blog we mentioned the portrait of Duchess Hélène of Mecklenburg (Mikla Burg -’big fortress’) in the Royal Château d’Amboise.

The portrait is there because as a close member of the French royal family she stayed in the Château on several occasions. Her husband Crown Prince Ferdinand, duke of Orléans, the eldest son of Louis Philippe, lived in the Château supervising the restoration work commissioned by his father who turned the old, cold, Château into a comfortable holiday retreat for his huge family.

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Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

Dreaming of a White Christmas

With only days to go, Amboise might still be lucky enough to have a White Christmas. If not, pop into the Château Royal d'Amboise. It has one. And very pretty it is too. Well worth the visit.

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Pamela Pamela Shields Pamela Pamela Shields

The Dauphin of Scotland.

In 1558, when the dauphin married Mary, Queen of Scots, Henry II considered his son to be the dauphin of Scotland. Official documents were headed ‘King and Queen Dauphins of Scotland, England and Ireland’.

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