This video is absolutely and profoundly timely for me. I recognize this may sound quite pretentious; but, I am currently throwing myself into cultivating the interior decor of my recently purchased Home and I consider the private quarters of Marie Antoinette to be my PRIMARY decor inspiration. I am a young woman and Live alone. I do not have anyone else's decor preferences to consider or assimilate into my space. My Home can be as hyper-feminine and pretty as I can potentially render it. Ever since I studied abroad in Paris whilst in college years ago and made the trip out to the Palais Versailles, I felt inwardly determined to someday have my own Home featuring elements such as French Provincial furniture, gold mirrors, elegant fabrics and prints, and an adherence to the classic and unabashedly ornate. Thank you for making this video. It is detailed and thoroughly informative. 🖤
This video couldn’t drop at a more perfect time. Just as my obsession with Marie Antoinette has reignited. I watched Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette a few days ago for the millionth time. So excited to watch this video tonight!
I was a student in the early 70’s and was so disappointed when we visited the palace to find that they were empty rooms. It was still beautiful but they have since reproduced the furniture and I have been told that it now superb.
I was there a few years back, and I was overwhelmed by the amount of people everywhere, by the end I was trying to escape it, did not enjoy it. However, renting a golf cart and driving around the gardens proved to be the absolute highlight, would love to repeat the weirdness and pleasure of it.
Thank you for your video. I am traveling to Paris next Summer, I cannot wait to visit her apartments in Versailles and her quarters at the Petit Trianon.
Now I understand why Marie~Antoinette craved a simple country life and had the Petit Trianon built, probably to save her sanity from having to live under all that completely over the top opulence.
@@olavwilhelm6843 I have not been able to find any information supporting your statement. However, I was referring to the Queens Hamlet that she had built on the Petit Trianon estate which was given to her by her husband the King. As the Hamlet is under the umbrella of the title Petition Trianon, I’ve found that’s what most people call it.
I do find it hard to balance all the beauty of the palace with the fact that people outside the gates were in poverty and starving. However, it's something we've always seen in history and still see today.
I’ve heard it was originally built to keep all the quarrelling nobility confined at the reach of the king, but it became a truly golden cage where the royal family was at the mercy of the monster they created.
What did they do when rulers could no longer walk all those stairs or when they were ill; or when the Queen was in a family way and in her "confinement?"
In England, when King Henry VIII could no longer walk due to his obesity and infected leg, he was either carried everywhere by servants in a litter or by Katherine Parr's marriage to him he had an early version of a wheelchair he was pushed around the palace in.
Absolutely beautiful, it's almost too beautiful, how could you not become bewitched living there to the point where your dreams trun into a delusional reality, which in the end leads to your death. I wonder if that memory of beauty followed them to jail, did the memory of those beautiful rooms and gardens give them some kind of escape or was it torturous to have those memories. I love the fall of empires and how they are usually the fault of their own demise.
Beautifully written, I can't imagine living in such splendor and fantasy then in an instant losing everything, including their lives. Absolute Monarchies always crash and burn at some point.
Rome and Egypt were some of the greatest empires in history. And many rulers copied their Practices .Art and Architecture. Even here in the US we have an obelisk which is clearly Egyptian in our nation’s capital.
What England did differently was work with the environment. The way the interior of a palace was designed had more to do with what was outside than what was in.
I simply wish a life like the women of Ramayan and Mahabharat for myself I want to live like an Empress and I seriously deserve more more more than that Never an iota less
So the tax paying, starving people of France should have just shut up instead of fighting for their lives and their families? What a foolish comment. Don't you know about the French revolution?
@@NoShelfControlc’est votre commentaire qui est stupide . Beaucoup de pays d’Europe sont des monarchies constitutionnelles et leur peuple ne sont ni affamés ni en danger de mort . La France aurait pu évoluer vers ce type de régime sans passer par cette révolution sanglante qui n’a jamais été issue du peuple mais de la bourgeoisie avide de pouvoirs . Cela aurait évité les milliers de morts et les luttes fratricides.
I really would like to go back to Paris. I had a lot of fun there when I went with the right person . I remember some things. I did not like when the fake ysa ward and married went and all their relatives at all those different people went. They seriously have a problem and followed me to everywhere formerly I went and wanted to go naturally . They are really nasty. I hope to have some good experiences with the right people from them which are really the older Mormon bishops and presidents that are white and other general authorities.
It's just too much over the top to the point of being ugly.As if they didn't know where to stop with the opulence they just threw everything in ! It defies good taste!
It makes me uncomfortable. There are too many vertical lines--the pattern on the wallpaper, the moldings beside the fireplace, etc. A bedroom is supposed to be restful but this one makes you feel like you must stand at attention. Maybe it was supposed to. I don't know.
No comparison with England's any palace. Mankind cannot invent any greater architectures than those used in England. It's the last of modernity in architecture. Just like nobody can be Shakespeare, Aristotle, Plato anymore. They are the ends. In Versailles, walls have no place left without art. How can you live in a room inside which the four walls full of art and countless of colours gaze at you. See the St. Paul's Cathedral, Buckingham Palace, Blenheim Palace, Windsor Castle, The great Westminster, British Museum, Oxford, Cambridge, Westminster Abbey and several more...
This video is absolutely and profoundly timely for me. I recognize this may sound quite pretentious; but, I am currently throwing myself into cultivating the interior decor of my recently purchased Home and I consider the private quarters of Marie Antoinette to be my PRIMARY decor inspiration. I am a young woman and Live alone. I do not have anyone else's decor preferences to consider or assimilate into my space. My Home can be as hyper-feminine and pretty as I can potentially render it. Ever since I studied abroad in Paris whilst in college years ago and made the trip out to the Palais Versailles, I felt inwardly determined to someday have my own Home featuring elements such as French Provincial furniture, gold mirrors, elegant fabrics and prints, and an adherence to the classic and unabashedly ornate. Thank you for making this video. It is detailed and thoroughly informative. 🖤
How fun, very happy for you!
Please give your local thrift shops a visit! You will find remarkable and perfect items! I did!
i think that's an excellent idea ( i hope you'll enjoy your new home ) ! ! !
Doesn't sound pretentious at all! If it's restful and inspiring to you that's all that matters
I love it and am absolutely here for it!!
This video couldn’t drop at a more perfect time. Just as my obsession with Marie Antoinette has reignited. I watched Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette a few days ago for the millionth time. So excited to watch this video tonight!
I was a student in the early 70’s and was so disappointed when we visited the palace to find that they were empty rooms. It was still beautiful but they have since reproduced the furniture and I have been told that it now superb.
I visited Versailles in 2015 and it was breathtaking. My only disappointment was not being able to explore the gardens because it was raining heavily.
For the furniture it is not reproduction 😂😂 they buy when they have the opportunity the originals in auctions
Versailles is truly an experience.
I was there a few years back, and I was overwhelmed by the amount of people everywhere, by the end I was trying to escape it, did not enjoy it. However, renting a golf cart and driving around the gardens proved to be the absolute highlight, would love to repeat the weirdness and pleasure of it.
Beautiful, so nice this is all preserved for the world to see. THANK YOU.
I would like to know more about the purchase of Marie Antionette's original bedspread found in NY in 1955 - an absolutely incredible find!
I love 18th century france; the source of the highest form of taste and exquisite furnishings- which most european monarchs emulated such style.
Thank you for your video. I am traveling to Paris next Summer, I cannot wait to visit her apartments in Versailles and her quarters at the Petit Trianon.
Now I understand why Marie~Antoinette craved a simple country life and had the Petit Trianon built, probably to save her sanity from having to live under all that completely over the top opulence.
The petit Trianon was build for Madame dePompadour 1762 and not for Marie Antoinette
@@olavwilhelm6843 I have not been able to find any information supporting your statement. However, I was referring to the Queens Hamlet that she had built on the Petit Trianon estate which was given to her by her husband the King. As the Hamlet is under the umbrella of the title Petition Trianon, I’ve found that’s what most people call it.
I toured Versailles with my Husband about 20 years ago. It was elegant with a wonderful view of the gardens.❤
I find it interesting that people have enjoyed watching others eat well before mukbang!
Gross 🤮
I do find it hard to balance all the beauty of the palace with the fact that people outside the gates were in poverty and starving. However, it's something we've always seen in history and still see today.
@@Bess9779 They got their revenge though and changed France forever.
Lovely, beautiful video.
I loved the queen staircase when we toured we were told that they were 17 different colors of marble used
Too much differing types of marble made it look very oppressive.
Breathtaking beauty!
Incredible
Fabulous surroundings, but I don't know if living in such a fishbowl was so wonderful.
Heard they had to excavate the place of people so they can watch the palace out because it stinks so much of pee and poo
I’ve heard it was originally built to keep all the quarrelling nobility confined at the reach of the king, but it became a truly golden cage where the royal family was at the mercy of the monster they created.
thank you thank you. I'm such of a fan of anything french baroque
The narrator has a lovely voice. Lovely video.
Nicely done. Thank you.
Thank you very much!
I’ve been there it’s beautiful
I enjoyed every second of this!
What did they do when rulers could no longer walk all those stairs or when they were ill; or when the Queen was in a family way and in her "confinement?"
In England, when King Henry VIII could no longer walk due to his obesity and infected leg, he was either carried everywhere by servants in a litter or by Katherine Parr's marriage to him he had an early version of a wheelchair he was pushed around the palace in.
Absolutely beautiful, it's almost too beautiful, how could you not become bewitched living there to the point where your dreams trun into a delusional reality, which in the end leads to your death. I wonder if that memory of beauty followed them to jail, did the memory of those beautiful rooms and gardens give them some kind of escape or was it torturous to have those memories. I love the fall of empires and how they are usually the fault of their own demise.
C est la que vous vous trompez.
L histoires est fausse
Beautifully written, I can't imagine living in such splendor and fantasy then in an instant losing everything, including their lives. Absolute Monarchies always crash and burn at some point.
Why did they like paintings of Roman deities and why did they have false doors?
They had just discovered Pompey and were recovering Roman Statues which were inspiring them.
This was the Neo-classical time period, so everything Roman and Greek was their inspiration.
Cuz they all actually worship the devil/practice polytheism /pretty much ANYONE besides Jesus Christ……even though they “claimed” to do.
Rome and Egypt were some of the greatest empires in history. And many rulers copied their Practices .Art and Architecture. Even here in the US we have an obelisk which is clearly Egyptian in our nation’s capital.
What England did differently was work with the environment. The way the interior of a palace was designed had more to do with what was outside than what was in.
Question why where the chairs are they have mirrors ?
Being there to much to take in one day everything was beautiful a must to see if you in France.
Avec mes remerciements en compagnie de ma profonde gratitude infiniment
I simply wish a life like the women of Ramayan and Mahabharat for myself
I want to live like an Empress and I seriously deserve more more more than that
Never an iota less
Scary room
They're trying to escape reality, not capture the magic in it.
How did these survive the French Revolution?
I wonder how those chandeliers worked
Me, a utility person living in the basement servants quarters of a chopped up Victorian mansion: o how interesting
❤
I wish France was a Monarch today.
Its such a shame its not anymore.
So the tax paying, starving people of France should have just shut up instead of fighting for their lives and their families? What a foolish comment. Don't you know about the French revolution?
@@NoShelfControlyou obviously don’t. It was the middle class bourgeoise who pushed the revolution not the peasants
@@NoShelfControlc’est votre commentaire qui est stupide . Beaucoup de pays d’Europe sont des monarchies constitutionnelles et leur peuple ne sont ni affamés ni en danger de mort . La France aurait pu évoluer vers ce type de régime sans passer par cette révolution sanglante qui n’a jamais été issue du peuple mais de la bourgeoisie avide de pouvoirs . Cela aurait évité les milliers de morts et les luttes fratricides.
Would any of the Queen's have recognized these "restored" rooms?
I like her quarters better
Tremendously KITCH. Just because something is expensive doesn't make it tasteful.
This is so sick,,,they live like this and people starving everywhere
🌹
I really would like to go back to Paris. I had a lot of fun there when I went with the right person . I remember some things. I did not like when the fake ysa ward and married went and all their relatives at all those different people went. They seriously have a problem and followed me to everywhere formerly I went and wanted to go naturally . They are really nasty. I hope to have some good experiences with the right people from them which are really the older Mormon bishops and presidents that are white and other general authorities.
It's just too much over the top to the point of being ugly.As if they didn't know where to stop with the opulence they just threw everything in ! It defies good taste!
It makes me uncomfortable. There are too many vertical lines--the pattern on the wallpaper, the moldings beside the fireplace, etc. A bedroom is supposed to be restful but this one makes you feel like you must stand at attention. Maybe it was supposed to. I don't know.
I am looking for this comment😂 yep, I think the more is the better. I find it confusing like: where should I start to enjoy them😮
@@chocolatnoir1108 Your brain will get overloaded.
Damn I’m poor
Baroque*
No comparison with England's any palace. Mankind cannot invent any greater architectures than those used in England. It's the last of modernity in architecture. Just like nobody can be Shakespeare, Aristotle, Plato anymore. They are the ends. In Versailles, walls have no place left without art. How can you live in a room inside which the four walls full of art and countless of colours gaze at you. See the St. Paul's Cathedral, Buckingham Palace, Blenheim Palace, Windsor Castle, The great Westminster, British Museum, Oxford, Cambridge, Westminster Abbey and several more...
Thanks for mentioning those architectural works (l will revisit them)
How very arrogant and ignorant
@@JRNarian Power and prosperity lead to pride and arrogance
@@aquibhayat9075 not at all.
Alot of marble to polish
No fancy expensive art or color of the rooms could cover up the smells of feces urine etc🫣🫣😤😤
History is smelly
a bas le capitalisme!!!🚩🚩