Montretout

Montretout is a gated community of grand mansions located on the heights of Saint-Cloud in the Hauts-de-Seine. Several French personalities reside or have resided there. The estate was started by French king Louis-Philippe, and was occupied during the Second Empire by relatives of Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie. It was one of the battle sites during the Siege of Paris at the culmination of the Franco-Prussian War. German authorities occupied several houses during the Second World War.

Montretout
Gated community
Entrance to Montretout in 1941
Entrance to Montretout in 1941
Montretout is located in Paris
Montretout
Montretout
Location of Montretout on the map of Paris
Coordinates: 48°50′31″N 02°12′50″E
Founded byNapoleon

Etymology

Montretout is from French Montre Tout, meaning respectively “show all”, in reference to the estate’s location at the top of a hill, overlooking the Seine and Paris.

History

Origins

Philippe d'Orléans, brother of King Louis XIV, granted the land to the nuns of the Order of Saint Ursula, who stayed there until the French Revolution. The site housed then a pavilion for the guards of the Château de Saint-Cloud estate.[1] Napoleon acquired the estate in 1806. Under the reign of Louis-Philippe, the Pereire brothers bought the estate to lay the railway from Paris-Saint-Lazare to Versailles.[2] Once the track was completed, they resold the remainder of the land to a developer who transformed it into a gated community in 1832,[3] one of the first of its kind in France.[2]

In 1855 regulations were put in place to maintain land value: these stipulated that the lot must be built within three years of the purchase, and shops, cafés, and balls were prohibited. In 1932, the regulation was supplemented by the ban on dividing plots below 1,000 m2 (11,000 sq ft) or doing industrial and commercial activities there. Although it was forbidden, two luxury collective buildings were built there in the 1970s.[1]

Madame de Pompadour owned a property on the Montretout estate; it was bought by Charles André Pozzo di Borgo, the Russian ambassador to France. From 1896 to 1899, one of his descendants, Duke Pozzo di Borgo, had the house dismantled, transported and rebuilt and expanded by the architect Louis Dauvergne on the estate of Dangu in Normandy, which he had acquired in 1884.[4]

Second Empire

Napoleon III became the owner of a portion of the estate; the first houses were built there starting 1850.[2] Napoleon III offered houses to his chief of staff, Jeani-François Mocquard,[5] to his officers and to members of the court of Empress Eugenie.[2] The emperor also gave Marguerite Bellanger, his last mistress, a house in the park.[2]

During the Franco-Prussian War

During the 1870–1871 Siege of Paris, the French troops evacuated the plateau above the village of Saint-Cloud which was occupied by a fortification, La Redoute de Montretout. This redoubt was immediately occupied by Prussian forces. The French attempted to reclaim the redoubt without success in the winter of 1870. On January 19, 1871, the French recaptured the redoubt and the much damaged Saint-Cloud and Montretout quarter during the Battle of Buzenval.[2]

References

  1. Callen, Delphine; Goix, Renaud Le (2007). "Fermetures et "entre soi" dans les enclaves résidentielles". La métropole parisienne: Centralités, inégalités, proximités (in French). Belin: 17 p.
  2. "Flânerie au cœur du quartier Centre/Village sur le site de la ville de Saint-Cloud". www.saintcloud.fr. 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-11-18. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  3. Le Goix, Renaud (2006). "Les gated communities aux États-Unis et en France : une innovation dans le développement périurbain ?" [The Gated Communities in the United States and France: an innovation in peri-urban development?]. Hérodote (in French). 3 (122): 107–137 (120) via CAIRN.
  4. Lorrain, François-Guillaume (2015-09-30). Ces lieux qui ont fait la France (in French). Fayard. ISBN 978-2-213-68930-2.
  5. Bennoui, Sabrina (2016-07-14). "Jean Dujardin s'est installé chez Lino Ventura" [Jean Dujardin moved to Lino Ventura]. leparisien (in French). Retrieved 2022-11-08.
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