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Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Visiting the National French Renaissance Museum at Ecouen with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget




Visiting the National French Renaissance Museum at Ecouen with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget – Ruth Pennington Paget


On a cold wintry weekend, Laurent and I drove out to the French National Renaissance Museum at Ecouen, which is located by the Charles de Gaulle Airport in Roissy.  There might be a bus that goes there now, but when we went you had to drive.

In the courtyard of the château are marble copies of Michelangelo’s torso-turning Dying Slave statues.  The statues remind you that a lot of backbreaking, work went into creating these beautiful French castles.

Ecouen is the National Renaissance Museum, because it was the home of its celebrated Seigneur, Anne de Montmorency.  Anne was a  “prince du sang” (prince sharing royal blood with the king), who could hold the throne, if the king became incapacitated or if he so desired to take it; Anne was a general and well-liked by the troops.

Anne worked as the name for a man or woman during the Renaissance in France.  If you look at the story of Anne in the Bible, you can still see that as the mother of Mary, Anne still holds an aura of dignity and ethics for being the grandmother of the founder of the Christian religion – Jesus Christ.  Anne de Montmorency played this role in France, too, as an advisor to kings and protector of the realm as a general.

However, Anne used his early retirement by a Valois king who did not like him to direct and complete the work at Ecouen.

When Francis the First died and Henri II became king, Anne de Montmorency was reinstated as a general to support the Catholic Cause against Protestants in France.

Anne de Montmorency died fighting Protestants on November 10, 1567.  Despite being a soldier, he lived to be 75 years old.

I liked Anne de Montmorency, because he could combine the work of being a general with that of reading and the arts as a true Renaissance man.  I always liked working with management consultants for the same reason. 

Anne de Montmorency’s library was my favorite part of the château.  He read books from antiquity as well as those from his era.  He also reminded me of many people in my family, who have home libraries: a ladies’ library for the women with cookbooks and gardening books, and a gentlemen’s library with farming, boat navigation, and irrigation books. 

The Ecouen Château had furniture whereas many other French châteaux do not, because the furniture was sold during the French Revolution.

Ecouen had some interesting pieces of furniture, though, including a Spanish vargueño, which was a Spanish military desk from the Renaissance period.  It folded up and could be transported from battlefield to battlefield.

They were many wooden chests called “coffres” that the military elite and royals used to transport lifestyle goods around the countryside, too.  The royals did progressions around the countryside from one loyal noble’s home to another in the Middle Ages before Louis XIV stayed at Versailles and ran the kingdom and much of Europe from that palace.

I liked the cassoni (wedding chests) and marveled at the luster of the dishes from Iznik (Turkey) that Anne de Montmorency probably bought, but considered to be war booty.

The National Renaissance Museum at Ecouen clearly shows with its items on display that at least French royals and aristocrats knew all about acquiring high-quality, luxury products on the international market long before globalization became a business buzzword.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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