Versailles: Palace and People
This seminar
investigates the creation, growth, and changing meanings of the palace and
gardens of Versailles from the seventeenth century to the present. After
exploring the project’s relation to earlier French and foreign models, the
course examines how Louis XIV and his artists transformed a modest hunting
lodge into a physical expression of French absolutist monarchy and a symbolic
mirror of Louis’s persona as the Sun King. Topics include the creation of new
structures to accommodate the palace’s designation as the seat of government in
1682; the layout, decoration, and function of the state apartments; the
creation and renewal of palace furnishings in royally-sponsored workshops; the
development of the gardens and the dynamic interaction of palace and park; the
rituals and trappings of court life, including official etiquette as well as
spaces of recreation and retreat; the role of dress and textiles both as a
luxury industry and as a component of social identity and display in a court
culture; the palace’s role in royal propaganda, including its depiction in
multiple media; and its relation to the wider world, both as a model for other
European courts and as a site of cross-cultural exchange. The seminar also
examines Versailles’s fortunes after Louis XIV’s death in 1715, both as a royal
palace under his eighteenth-century successors (including new structures like
the Royal Opera, the Petit Trianon, and the Queen’s Hamlet for Marie
Antoinette) and as a national monument, museum, and historic site in the
nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries. 3 credits.
Based on final research project, this course may satisfy
the pre-1800 requirement