Château de Puyguilhem

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024

Комментарии • 60

  • @user-du4os4lm5d
    @user-du4os4lm5d 2 года назад +2

    Прекраснейший,чудесный,великолепный замок, очень люблю старинные замки и дворцы,спасибо вам за видео

  • @kevinjewell233
    @kevinjewell233 2 года назад +14

    That seat in the chatelain's bedroom wasn't for doing needlepoint but for archers, the window would have been originally a meurtrier/arrow slit...wood floors are called parquet, same word as in English...the wardrobe off his bedroom would have been a small private chapel....Chateaux were strategically placed to impress the peasants, not accommodate them, so the imposing placement was chosen for them to inspire awe of their masters, not investigate how lavishly they lived...

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for having a look. What you say about the seats is interesting. I have never heard of these formerly being used for arrow slits. Although I believe I’ve actually seen paintings from the mediaeval era of women doing needle point by these windows as it was the best source of light. I’ll have to do further research. As for the wood floors, I was doing a bad job of describing what is called “sol de Périgord”. This is a particular style of wood floor made up of short boards running one way and one longboard running in adjacent direction on both sides. Being new to this region I was going by what local people had told us about this being a particular flooring style of the Périgord region. I find it interesting that wood floors are called parquet floors in Europe. In the United States a parquet floor is a particular style of wood floor. The general term for wood flooring would be called a hardwood floor. Thanks for your input.

    • @kevinjewell233
      @kevinjewell233 2 года назад

      @@EdmunddelaRiviere the holes would have been enlarged in the 17th and 18th Centuries, some maybe even in the 19th as some homes fell into disrepair for extensive periods over time...

  • @kbflorida888
    @kbflorida888 2 года назад +2

    I remember as a kid watching Errol Flynn movies & castles, until my father reminded me how COLD they were with NO running water or bathrooms. We live in a better time. Great video tho…thanx for showing us.

  • @angeliquedomini7259
    @angeliquedomini7259 2 года назад +12

    Merci pour cette visite. Très beau château restauré en 1939 par le Centre des Monuments Nationaux de France.

    • @moniquewolfel9095
      @moniquewolfel9095 2 года назад

      QUELLE CONNERIE EN 1939 LA GUERRE AVAIT DETRUIT LES MAISONS PLUS DE MAISONS PLUS DE MARIS PLUS D AGRICULTURE ALORS LES MONUMENTS NATIONAUX POUR QUI LES FENIANTS

  • @chrisbeckstrom6182
    @chrisbeckstrom6182 2 года назад +13

    It's amazing how intact that chateau is. For its age I would expect to see it very altered. Thanks for showing it.

  • @sallylambert7552
    @sallylambert7552 2 года назад +3

    So interesting. Cant imagine how cold in the winter, how much wood or coal this used and how many people it would take to keep the fireplaces stocked. The tapestries were beautiful. The few pieces of furniture were beautifully carved. My imagination goes wild thinking of the people who lived here, what they wore, ate and how they lived. Just amazing!

  • @gerronhite7058
    @gerronhite7058 2 года назад +5

    The bottom of the stone spiral staircase you mentioned is the actual individual stone used to create the stairs

  • @rjspain56
    @rjspain56 2 года назад +10

    I'm surprised and happy to see a castle with few rooms where you have to step up or down. Most chateaux I've been in would be difficult for me to tour now that my knees are shot and having to step up to go from room to room would be painful. Just add an elevator (lift) and I can move in.

    • @rw9175
      @rw9175 2 года назад +3

      Sadly...I have similar issues of mobility...!

    • @N0N4M30
      @N0N4M30 2 года назад

      That’s why usually they had also bedrooms on the ground floor or depending on your status you had people who would carry you around

  • @kate2create738
    @kate2create738 2 года назад

    Thank you for showing a lovely tour!

  • @carolweaver3269
    @carolweaver3269 2 года назад +3

    Had to have been absolutely stunning in its day! Well made. At least it is being kept up. Wish that was done for every single one that is not sold People are very interested in this day and I am shocked of all the younger people already retired from work in their 40's and 50's and they have so much money they buy all of these Castles/Chateaus/Villa's and find a unique way to get them restored and live in them. People used to work forever, and then with Medicare in the U.S. they can retire at maybe 66 yr if they are a teacher maybe in their 50's. People with a large business of their own could sell it and do this.
    But it is fantastic there is a growing interest. It takes alot of work so you need to be young to take it on and when you ar old it is finished up and you are ready to live in it with your family if you have one.

    • @rw9175
      @rw9175 2 года назад +1

      One might try to restore a chateau if young and in good health...have a BnB...!

  • @greghammer4000
    @greghammer4000 2 года назад +8

    a beautiful chateau....one of the best....stone cutting is incredible for the 16 th century

  • @lucyyoung5307
    @lucyyoung5307 2 года назад +8

    Hi from north Georgia. During my visit to Egypt we saw pigeon houses that were smaller in size. Our tour guide said they eat pigeons.

    • @rosemariecomtois2839
      @rosemariecomtois2839 2 года назад +7

      Pigeon meat was very desirable
      And were roasted on iron spits on the huge kitchen fireplaces .
      I collect cookbooks and in one is
      A recipe for chestnut stuffed pigeon with chestnut sauce ! So it was Interesting they had Chestnut trees on the estate.

    • @cathleencumpton779
      @cathleencumpton779 2 года назад

      Pigeons were used as a form of communication. Carrier pigeons sent information to battlefields or to neighboring villages or to family members. It was the ancient form of the newspaper.

    • @ankh228
      @ankh228 2 года назад

      Taubenfleisch ist sehr zart und schmeckt auch gut.

    • @kerrylynnparsons9441
      @kerrylynnparsons9441 2 года назад +1

      Yes, they did eat pigeons in France too. Pigeoniere. 🇫🇷

  • @hkimsey
    @hkimsey 5 месяцев назад +1

    Imagine heating that space!! It is in amazing condition!

  • @clairejonas6125
    @clairejonas6125 2 года назад +2

    On l'appelle le "petit Chambord" périgourdin !
    Il est magnifique.

  • @brendajollymore4229
    @brendajollymore4229 2 года назад +4

    They also built the stairs like that so if the chateau were attacked the attackers had to run up against the outside wall. This way you could attack that someone easier and also they would of had to come up the stairs one on one!
    .

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад

      Yes but I do not believe these staircases were built for defense. You could’ve sent people up there three across or rode a horse of them. Lol. (I know they wouldn’t) These were some of the biggest spiral staircases I have come across.

    • @cathleencumpton779
      @cathleencumpton779 2 года назад +2

      They also turned a specific direction as to allow archers to shoot arrows up and down the stairs.

  • @pegpeg5496
    @pegpeg5496 2 года назад +4

    You said in this video chestnuts don't grow in the United States. Major states for chestnut production include California, Oregon, Washington, Michigan, Florida, Ohio, and Virginia.

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад +1

      Yes I might’ve been too general in that statement. I know that they have been regrowing “hybrid” chestnuts in the United States but we didn’t have them in the area I was from. Thanks for watching.

  • @cathleencumpton779
    @cathleencumpton779 2 года назад +2

    Great chateau! Those were not door knockers in the center of the door so low down that was the door knob or handle to open and close the door I think that was indeed a pantry that you were looking at off the kitchen. The chatalane(sp) was not necessarily the owner of the Chateau but the caretaker of the Chateau. Something like a British gentleman would have a butler.

    • @prarieborn6458
      @prarieborn6458 2 года назад

      Beautful , beautiful and romantic! I am no expert but I have read a lot of history and the term for the man in charge was Castellan, in English.I do not
      know how it translates to French. A Chatelaine was the Lady of the chateau ,keeper of the keys, of a chateau and/or an english castle. Those spices were. as you remarked, very expensive, the cooks and kitchen staff could not be trusted. So many French words and phrases are mixed in. Thank You, for sharing your adventure. I am amazed that there are still wild boar around in Europe. Is that what the locals hunt on Sunday?I know feral pigs are a big problem in the US.

  • @raffaellavitiello1762
    @raffaellavitiello1762 2 года назад +4

    Amazing how you ignore so many beautiful tapisseries. Never seen so many , wish you show us some close up and history of those amazing works of art . Oviously you are into stones , l love them too but ..... pity

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад +4

      That’s a great point. I apologize for that I really was drawn in by the architecture and the furniture. There really is so much going on there and you wouldn’t think that because the place was kind of empty but it allowed you to see so much more of the actual structure. I’m looking forward to going back, maybe I will do another video about the tapestries of this place. I’ll have to wait until tourist season ends though.

  • @ednabrazil9961
    @ednabrazil9961 2 года назад +1

    I wanted to be there too to see all this beauty. thank you 🤗

  • @wernerdanler2742
    @wernerdanler2742 2 года назад +3

    Chatelain is not gender specific. Male or female owner of a chateaux.

  • @cathleencumpton779
    @cathleencumpton779 2 года назад +2

    I don't believe that the the difference in the steps would not have been structural, I think it was merely cosmetic, where they merely overlaid some new concrete on top of the old steps to make them flatter and not so worn.

  • @michaelmoore8834
    @michaelmoore8834 2 года назад +2

    Doing a add on to my double wide to looks like this

  • @sergelachantee767
    @sergelachantee767 2 года назад +1

    nationalisation total!!!🚩🚩

  • @CountryLady1752
    @CountryLady1752 2 года назад +1

    Stunning. Cooked Pigeon is squab:)

  • @rw9175
    @rw9175 2 года назад

    Would be AMAZING to live here !!!

  • @raynonabohrer5624
    @raynonabohrer5624 2 года назад +2

    This place is beautiful. Is its going be fix?

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад

      It’s maintained by the French government and they are maintaining it as you see in one room on the first floor that we couldn’t get into.

  • @mireillelibert3910
    @mireillelibert3910 2 года назад +1

    Très beaux

  • @maticbukovac6966
    @maticbukovac6966 2 года назад

    The pigeons return to where they were born/hatched and so the cycle continues.

  • @rrl4245
    @rrl4245 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for showing us your visit. Fascinating. Who owns the castle? It's very well maintained. Did they just allow you to wander the place? Was it just open to the public?

    • @EdmunddelaRiviere
      @EdmunddelaRiviere  2 года назад +5

      I believe it’s owned by the French government. It looks like during the busy season there are tour guides but this time of year you pay your fee and go in and see the place.

  • @toecutterp
    @toecutterp 2 года назад

    It’s large because before the great reset the people that built all of those things that have huge doors etc. were large people

  • @bridgetcooper6331
    @bridgetcooper6331 2 года назад +1

    Moving the camera too fast, can’t see and enjoy it.

  • @suegreene1
    @suegreene1 2 года назад +1

    The pidgeonarie were used for food

  • @maximhollandnederlandthene7640
    @maximhollandnederlandthene7640 2 года назад

    Is this a Belgian castle ?

  • @cgannis2251
    @cgannis2251 2 года назад

    Amazing

  • @maxbear215
    @maxbear215 2 года назад +1

    Is this for sale?

  • @viki008
    @viki008 2 года назад +1

    tjs mieux quelques meubles de bonne qualité que bourrés des trucs néogothiques ;-)