Travel Back to the 17th Century | Step into the Rooms of Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte
📍Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte
It belonged to the legendary French finance minister of fate—Nicolas Fouquet. He built the most perfect palace of the 17th century with his dreams. Although he was later arrested and imprisoned, the castle miraculously survived. Centuries later, the Sommier family and today’s de Vogüé family took over its restoration, keeping everything as it was originally.✨
🛏️ The Master's Bedroom | A Place Where History Sleeps
When you enter the master’s bedroom, the carved wooden bed still quietly stands in the center of the room, with heavy silk curtains hanging down, as if Minister Fouquet had only temporarily left and would return to continue dreaming of his palace.
🎀 The Lady’s Room | Soft Light and Fragrance
Next door, the lady’s bedroom is as gentle as a painting. A gilded mirror vanity, floral wallpaper, antique trunks, and embroidered cushions—all wrapped in time, exuding a faint fragrance. Sunlight streams through the window panes, falling on the mirror, as if you can still see her sitting there, gently stroking her golden hair.
📚 The Study | A Sanctuary of Thought and Art
This is the most breathtaking space in the entire castle. All four walls are lined with neatly arranged bookshelves that reach the ceiling. It once housed political, literary, and artistic classics—and was Fouquet’s favorite place to stay. You can imagine him planning the future of France at this very desk.
👑 The King’s Room | Glory Before Versailles
Back then, Louis XIV stayed here briefly. This “King’s Bedroom” still retains the furnishings from that time: green and gold tapestries, carved bedposts, candlesticks, and mirrors reflecting each other. The splendor of that night also marked the beginning of a turning point in fate. “The king rested here, while the palace’s owner was imprisoned.”
🕰️ Guardians of the Original Appearance
The most moving thing about Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte is not its luxury, but its “unchanged” state. Every piece of furniture, every candlestick, every carving in the rooms comes from the original 17th-century arrangement. The de Vogüé family still lives in part of the castle today, acting as guardians of time, keeping the palace alive with a “breath of life.”
At Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, history is not the past, but a present that still gently breathes.💐