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62-770: [REDACTED] Look up Chantilly  or chantilly in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Chantilly may refer to: Places [ edit ] France [ edit ] Chantilly, Oise , a city US Chantilly , a football club Château de Chantilly United States [ edit ] Chantilly, Missouri , an unincorporated community Chantilly (Charlotte neighborhood) , North Carolina Chantilly, Virginia , an unincorporated area in Fairfax County Chantilly High School Chantilly (Montross, Virginia) ,

124-496: A completely different system based on an aqueduct coming from the area around Senlis . In the 18th century a mineral water source was discovered in the valley and a garden pavilion was built between 1725 and 1728 to allow the public to come drink from it. This was a separate source from the source of ferruginous water, called Chantilly water, discovered at La Chausée in Gouvieux, and bottled and carbonated there from 1882 into

186-464: A few hamlets scattered outside the château. At the beginning of the 16th century, there were four: In this period, Quinquempoix began to see an extension of the château's functions. It was home to a chapel devoted to Saint Germain mentioned as early as 1219, which disappeared in the 17th century with the extension of the château's gardens. Several houses were built in Quinquempoix to accommodate

248-587: A historic archaeological site Other [ edit ] Battle of Chantilly , in Virginia during the American Civil War Chantilly Codex , a medieval manuscript Chantilly Conferences , during World War I Chantilly cream, a synonym for whipped cream Chantilly lace , from Chantilly, Oise Chantilly Lace (film) , 1993 "Chantilly Lace" (song) , 1958, by The Big Bopper Chantilly porcelain , made at

310-440: A historic archaeological site Other [ edit ] Battle of Chantilly , in Virginia during the American Civil War Chantilly Codex , a medieval manuscript Chantilly Conferences , during World War I Chantilly cream, a synonym for whipped cream Chantilly lace , from Chantilly, Oise Chantilly Lace (film) , 1993 "Chantilly Lace" (song) , 1958, by The Big Bopper Chantilly porcelain , made at

372-411: A recurrence of his old wounds. Chantilly was also in the 19th century a playground for aristocrats and artists, as well as home to an English community with ties to horse racing. The first horse races were run in 1834 on the lawn area known as the pelouse, and the 1840s saw an influx of bettors of all social classes, especially from Paris. The success of the horse races was primarily due to the opening of

434-537: A small child for company. So tight had his security been that not even local officials knew of his presence or identity. No identifying documents or papers were found on his person and his name was discovered only when the postman remembered delivering newspapers to him addressed to 'Citoyen Thomas Muir'. Several days later, when the news of Muir's death reached Paris, a brief obituary notice was inserted in Le Moniteur Universel saying that he had died from

496-411: A tax on racetrack bets. A sewage treatment plant was built in 1969 at La Canardière, then moved to Gouvieux in 2006. This 22 km (14 mile) network is administered by a regional agency, the syndicat intercommunal pour le traitement des eaux de la vallée de la Nonette (SICTEUV), which covers Apremont , Avilly-Saint-Léonard , Chantilly, Gouvieux et Vineuil-Saint-Firmin . No traces of habitation from

558-521: A year. The Grand Duke of Mecklenburg , head of the 18th Army Corps, occupied the chateau along with his general staff. His troops requisitioned the Great Stables, the racecourse stables, which had been evacuated, and some privately owned residences as well. A racing economy grew up around the racecourse, with many stables devoted to training thoroughbred horses. Urban development grew up around these racing activities with new neighbourhoods such as

620-724: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Chantilly [REDACTED] Look up Chantilly  or chantilly in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Chantilly may refer to: Places [ edit ] France [ edit ] Chantilly, Oise , a city US Chantilly , a football club Château de Chantilly United States [ edit ] Chantilly, Missouri , an unincorporated community Chantilly (Charlotte neighborhood) , North Carolina Chantilly, Virginia , an unincorporated area in Fairfax County Chantilly High School Chantilly (Montross, Virginia) ,

682-640: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Chantilly, Oise Chantilly ( / ʃ æ n ˈ t ɪ l i / shan- TIL -ee , French: [ʃɑ̃tiji] ; Picard : Cantily ) is a commune in the Oise department in the Valley of the Nonette in the Hauts-de-France region of Northern France . Surrounded by Chantilly Forest ,

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744-622: Is only surpassed in France by the Musée du Louvre . The museum also contains a collection of 1,300 manuscripts including the daybook Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry . As a condition of its bequest to the Institut de France by the Duke of Aumale, the collection's presentation cannot be modified nor can it be loaned out, so it is a permanent fixture of Chantilly. The Grandes Écuries , which contain

806-495: The Commelles ponds, created in the 13th century by the monks of Chaalis Abbey to stock fish. The river Nonette runs through the town itself. This 44 km (27 mile) long river is also part of the watershed of the Oise and is channeled into canals throughout the municipality. In fact, the creation of the château gardens by André Le Nôtre required the complete transformation of the waterway starting in 1663. The riverbed

868-946: The First Battle of the Marne , General Joseph Joffre installed his headquarters in Chantilly because of the easy access it offered to Paris by rail. The Grand Quartier-Général , or HQ, took over the hôtel du Grand Condé on 29 November 1914 with 450 officers and 800 clerks and soldiers. Joffre for his part lodged at the Villa Poiret about a hundred yards away. Joffre held the conference of Chantilly from 6 to 8 December 1915 to makes battle plans with his Allied counterparts and to coordinate military offensives for 1916. General Headquarters moved to Beauvais in December 1916, and Chantilly became home to hospitals for soldiers wounded on

930-580: The Grande Jacquerie . It was rebuilt by Pierre d'Orgemont and completed in 1394. During the Hundred Years' War Anglo-Burgundian forces laid siege to the château and Jacqueline de Paynel, widow of Pierre II d'Orgemont, who died at the battle of Agincourt , as well as of Jean de Fayel, was forced to surrender it. In return, the lives of those in the château were spared, but the surrounding villages were laid to waste. The city began as just

992-631: The Kings of France , from the 17th to the 19th centuries. It now houses the Musée Condé . Chantilly is also known for its horse racing track, Chantilly Racecourse , where prestigious races are held for the Prix du Jockey Club and Prix de Diane . Chantilly and the surrounding communities are home to the largest racehorse-training community in France. Chantilly is also home to the Living Museum of

1054-529: The Petit Château and the Château Neuf . The first was built in 1560 by the architect Jean Bullant for the constable Anne de Montmorency . The interior decoration goes back to the 18th century for the larger apartments, and was carried out by Jean Aubert , Jean-Baptiste Huet , and Jean-Baptiste Oudry . The smaller apartments redone in the 19th century are on the ground floor. The Château Neuf

1116-597: The haute bourgeoisie and artists moving to the area and building villas and chateaux in the surrounding communes, such as the Rothschild family in Gouvieux, for example. Luxury hotels were also built, such as the Hôtel du Grand Condé in 1908. Henri d'Orléans, Duke of Aumale , last lord of the town, encouraged the development of the racecourse and of the town as well as the arrival of the English. Between 1876 and 1882,

1178-577: The prehistoric or Iron Age eras have ever been found in Chantilly. A Roman -era grave site was however found on the banks of the Nonette, and Gallo-Roman roads have been discovered in Chantilly Forest . Merovingian tombs from the seventh century were found in the 17th and 19th centuries not far from the Faisanderie . Around 1223 Guy IV of Senlis agreed with the prior of Saint-Leu-d'Esserent that first referred to Terra cantiliaci . He

1240-539: The "little lawn". The highest point in the area, 112 meters (378'), is at Bois Lorris, in Lamorlaye . The lowest elevation is 35 metres (115'), at the Canardière on the banks of the Nonette in Gouvieux. The commune sits on a Lutetian sedimentary limestone plateau covered by Chantilly Forest . Sand created by wind and erosion covers this chalky plateau. This stone has also been used for building in parts of

1302-416: The 20th century. Also in the 18th century, a supply of drinking water was created by diverting water from the reservoir. In 1823, the last prince of Condé had eighteen fountains installed for the use of residents. In 1895 these were replaced with a supply from a water treatment plant in the neighboring village of Lamorlaye. This brought in water from Chantilly, Lamorlaye and Boran-sur-Oise then distributed

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1364-456: The Abbey of Saint-Denis, which was once very close to the château. As a city, Chantilly is less than 250 years old. The oldest part is the rue du Connétable, which began in 1727 as a planned allotment called "the officials' housing", allocated from part of the château estate. These buildings are now numbered 25 through 67 on the rue du Connétable. The rest of the neighborhood was sold to the end of

1426-655: The Anglo-Chinese garden installed between 1772 and 1774 in the center of which is the Hameau de Chantilly, the English garden installed in 1817 around the temple of Venus on the western side and, near the forest, the La Cabotière and de Sylvie parks. The entire estate was designated a historic monument by the decrees of 24 October and December 1988. The Condé Museum in the château has one of the oldest collections of historic art in France and its collection of paintings

1488-564: The Bois Saint-Denis exclusively devoted to the activity. There were two trainers and seventeen hands in the 1846 and thirty trainers and 309 nands in 1896. Many in the racing community were British—76% of the jockeys, lads and trainers in 1911—and the British were such a presence in the area that an Anglican chapel was built around 1870. At the same time, Chantilly was becoming a vacation destination with many aristocrats, members of

1550-595: The Chantilly Estate and is periodically open to the public. Another geological feature is alluvial accumulations in the river valleys, which have allowed, in the case of the Nonette, the development of community gardens in the locality known as the Canardière. The town is bounded at its southern edge by the Thève , a 33 km (20 mile) long tributary of the Oise River . At this point that valley contains

1612-573: The Department of Oise. Sold as a national asset in 1799, the chateau was transformed into a stone quarry by a pair of entrepreneurs. Only the "little château" was preserved. The Great Stables were requisitioned by the army and used in turn by the 11th mounted horse regiment  [ fr ] , the 1er dragons or 1st Dragoons from 1803 to 1806 then the 1er régiment de chevau-légers lanciers polonais, or 1st Light Artillery Polish Lancers, from 1808 to 1814. A number of industrialists took advantage of

1674-580: The Duke had the château rebuilt and used it to house one of the most beautiful art collections of the time. By receiving high society in his palace, such as Empress Elizabeth of Austria , known as Sissi, and the Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovitch of Russia , he contributed to the growth of the town. When the château was opened to the public in 1898 after it was willed to the Institute of France , it drew even more tourists to

1736-722: The Horse , with stables built by the Princes of Condé. It is considered one of the more important tourist destinations in the Paris area. Chantilly gave its name to Chantilly cream and to Chantilly lace . The city was the base for the England national football team during the Euro 2016 Championship . Chantilly lies in the Parisian basin, at the south end of the region of Hauts-de-France and

1798-468: The Living Museum of the Horse, are among the most-visited horse-racing sites in the world. They were built between 1719 and 1740 by Jean Aubert. They are 186 meters (610') long with a central dome 38 meters (125') high, and could accommodate 240 horses and 500 dogs for the daily rides to hunt. Dressage demonstrations or re-enactments are held daily in the quarry. Horse shows are regularly held beneath

1860-425: The army used to mask artillery and troop movements from view. The town grew in 1928 with the annexation of the Bois Saint-Denis from Gouvieux. In 1930 a monument was put up to Maréchal Joffre on the avenue which now bears his name. The Wehrmacht entered the city on 13 September 1940, and occupied it. They used the Great Stables as a veterinary hospital for the horses they brought in from Germany, by some estimates

1922-696: The château from 1730 Chantilly Racecourse , for horse racing, in Oise Chantilly-Tiffany , a breed of domestic cat Chantilly cake Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Chantilly . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chantilly&oldid=1224780503 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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1984-621: The château from 1730 Chantilly Racecourse , for horse racing, in Oise Chantilly-Tiffany , a breed of domestic cat Chantilly cake Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Chantilly . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chantilly&oldid=1224780503 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

2046-466: The château officials. The Condés were among the first to flee abroad, just days after the fall of the Bastille , on 17 July 1789. The estate was sequestered on 13 June 1792 following the law on émigrés and subsequently subdivided and sold. The first section was sold between 1793 and 1795 – the old kitchen garden, the water garden and the last land available along today's rue du Connétable and around

2108-511: The château, which was one of the first steps toward autonomy from the surrounding parishes. In 1673, Louis II de Bourbon , the Prince of Condé known as the "Grand Condé", built a new road called rue Gouvieux, which is now the rue du Connétable. The land ceded by the château on both sides of this road formed the nucleus of the new town, as guesthouses, workshops for the artisans of the château, and lodgings for servants sprang up. This embryonic town

2170-487: The city was home to as many as 400 German horses during the war. The military command took over the hôtel du Grand Condé. Following the assassination of a collaborator , the parish priest, Abbot Charpentier, who authored a 1943 anti- Nazi sermon, was arrested along with several French Resistance fighters he had supported. He was deported to the Mauthausen camp, where he died 7 August 1944. The viaduct at La Canardière

2232-451: The commune. Using the new English techniques, it diversified in cloth, particularly in calico manufacture and laundering. It began to decline in 1814 then lost its monopoly and failed in 1822. In 1815, prince Louis Joseph, Prince of Condé came back to the area for good. He retrieved part of his family's former estate and bought back the rest. His son, Louis VI Henri  [ fr ] , had fountains installed in 1823 as well as many of

2294-630: The court of the Condés. The architectural standards for this housing were drawn by Jean Aubert , architect of the Great Stables. This housing was built between 1730 and 1733. In 1723, the Hospice de la Charité was built at the end of the Grande Rue. In the second half of the 18th century the princes furthered economic activity. Lace had been produced in the town since the 17th century but now reached its apogee. Porcelain manufacture began in 1726 and

2356-509: The coverage provoked by a Jules Bonnot's appearance, brandishing a Browning automatic, at the office of Le Petit Journal to complain about its coverage of their activities. The German Army entered Chantilly on 3 September 1914 but did not stay, leaving the next day. The château was occupied but there was no real destruction, unlike the neighboring towns of Creil and Senlis, Oise , where there were fires and considerable destruction. French soldiers did not come back until 9 September. After

2418-461: The dome. The porte Saint-Denis is part of an unfinished pavilion originally intended to provide symmetry with the current entrance of the Great Stables, on the other side of the open-air stables. When the Duke of Bourbon died in 1740, only this portion remained unfinished when construction stopped. This pavilion was to mark the entrance to the burgeoning city. Its name came from the old land holdings of

2480-629: The front, one in the hôtel Lovenjou, the other in the Egler Pavilion. One of the three camouflage workshops of the French First Engineers Regiment opened in 1917 in custom-built barracks on the petite pelouse near the racetrack. Up to 1200 women were hired, as well as 200 German prisoners of war and 200 workers from Annam in French Indo-China (then a French protectorate). They painted canvases which

2542-473: The north end of the Paris metropolitan area . It belongs to the historic region of Valois . Chantilly lies 39 km (25 miles) southwest of Beauvais , 79 km (50 miles) south of Amiens and 38 km (24 miles) north of Paris. Saint-Maximin lies to the north, Vineuil-Saint-Firmin to the northeast, Avilly-Saint-Léonard to the east, Pontarmé and Orry-la-Ville to the south-east, Coye-la-Forêt to

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2604-487: The other two and nearly 300 meters (yards) long, brought water to the Pavilon du Manse, which fed it to the garden ponds and waterfalls in the western gardens, since disappeared, sending it to a reservoir once located on the lawn. Part of this reservoir still exists near the racecourse, but it no longer contains water. Some of this hydrologic work was used to feed factories in the valley. The gardens that remain were watered by

2666-468: The petite pelouse, as well as the town houses that belonged to the Prince. Much of the land in this first section never came back to the estate. The rest of the land was divided into lots in 1798 and sold over time. When the Reign of Terror began, the mayor was run out, on 15 August 1793; he was replaced by a Jacobin . The château was transformed into a prison from 1793 to 1794, designated for suspects from

2728-531: The population works in Île-de-France . Chantilly straddles the junction of the Paris Basin and the western County of Valois, of which the Nonette River is a boundary. The site of the town was originally a clearing or meadowland, sometimes called a lawn or pelouse , which is mostly occupied today by the racecourse. The remaining open space between the town and the racecourse is always referred to as

2790-403: The prince's court officials. Also, the hôtel de Beauvais, built in 1539, lodged the master of the hunt of constable (connétable) Anne de Montmorency . The hôtel de Quinquempoix, built around 1553, housed the constable's equerry. In 1515, Anne's father, Guillaume de Montmorency, had obtained a papal bull that gave him the right to have mass said and all the sacraments performed in the chapel of

2852-400: The region, and still is today in the adjoining commune of Saint-Maximin . It was also used for building in Chantilly itself during the 18th century, when a quarry on the current site of the racecourse produced stone for the court officials' housing and the stables. In the following century the quarry was used to grow mushrooms, then as an air raid shelter during World War II. It now belongs to

2914-442: The sale of Condé assets to further develop their business activities. In 1792, the porcelain manufacturing enterprise turned its hand to ceramics under the hand of its new English owner, Christophe Potter . A copper laminating factory was established in the industrial buildings on the canal in 1801, and François Richard-Lenoir  [ fr ] opened a mill in 1807. It employed as many as 600 people and brought prosperity back to

2976-402: The south, Lamorlaye to the southwest and Gouvieux to the west. Chantilly is the centre of an urban area that includes the communes of Avilly-Saint-Léonard , Boran-sur-Oise , Coye-la-Forêt , Gouvieux , Lamorlaye and Vineuil-Saint-Firmin . It is the third-largest urban area in the Oise and the seventh-largest in Hauts-de-France . It has no large businesses or heavy industry and 40% of

3038-502: The street lamps in 1827. The Scottish political reformer Thomas Muir had been banished to Botany Bay for 14 years for the crime of sedition in 1793. He managed to escape having only spent 13 months there. An adventurous journey followed that eventually brought Muir as a citizen of France to Paris. Muir became in time the principal intermediary between the French Directory and the various republican refugees in Paris. He

3100-569: The town of 10,863 inhabitants (2017) falls within the metropolitan area of Paris . It lies 38.4 km (23.9 miles) north-northeast of the centre of Paris and together with six neighbouring communes forms an urban area of 37,254 inhabitants (2018). Intimately tied to the House of Montmorency in the 15th to 17th centuries, the Château de Chantilly was home to the Princes of Condé , cousins of

3162-531: The town—more than 100,000 in the first six months. Naturally such a profusion of wealth also provoked some greed. On the morning of 25 March 1912, the Bonnot Gang robbed the Société Générale de Chantilly and killed two employees before they fled. This was soon before they broke up and Jules Bonnot died in a shootout with police. The groups was notorious for using an automobile to get away and for

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3224-547: The train station in 1859. Later, a public station allowed the arrival of up to 20,000 bettors and visitors on race days. A track and permanent seating were gradually added to form the racecourse in use today. Attendance records began to be kept just before World War I; 40,000 people attended the prix du Jockey Club in 1912. During the Franco-Prussian War , Chantilly was occupied by the Prussian army for almost

3286-538: The treated water through two water towers on the Mont de Pô in Gouvieux. This water supply has been managed by the private company Lyonnaise des eaux since 1928. The sewer system was installed in 1878, but initially limited to the area around rue d'Aumale, the Condé Hospice and the rue de Paris, now known as the avenue du Maréchal Joffre. It was extended to the entire town in 1910 through a state subsidy financed by

3348-640: Was aware that his movements were under scrutiny by British Prime Minister William Pitt 's agents. In his last known communication with the Directory, in October 1798, he requested permission to leave Paris for somewhere less conspicuous, where his crucial negotiations with the Scottish emissaries could be conducted in safety. Sometime in the middle of November 1798, Muir moved incognito to Chantilly. On 26 January 1799, he died there, suddenly and alone, with only

3410-417: Was bombed by Allied forces on 30 May 1944, and the town was liberated by American tanks on 31 August 1944. The American 8th Air Force in turn installed itself at the hôtel du Grand Condé. Since the war, the city has developed new neighborhoods on the north side of town. Some hotels and villas at the center of town became residences; some stables were torn down to allow housing to be built. As this new housing

3472-481: Was built by architect Honoré Daumet between 1876 and 1882 on the site of the portion of the older building destroyed at the beginning of the 19th century. It contains paint galleries, libraries and the chapel. A gallery, built by architecte Félix Duban in the 1840s, links the two buildings. The château is surrounded by a 115-hectare (285 acre) park which includes 25 hectares (62 acres) of water gardens. The parks includes large formal gardens designed by André Le Nôtre ,

3534-534: Was built, a new population moved in who mostly work in the Paris area, while the town lost almost all of its remaining industrial base when the Guilleminot factories shut down in 1992. The château de Chantilly was built for the House of Montmorency , then was home to the Condés and finally to the Duke of Aumale , fifth son of Louis-Philippe . He willed it to the Institute of France . Le château has two parts:

3596-460: Was divided between the parish of Gouvieux in the diocese of Beauvais and the parish of Saint-Léonard in the diocese of Senlis . Louis expressed a wish in his will for a parish church near the château. Henri Jules de Bourbon-Condé fulfilled his father's wish in 1692 by building the church of Notre-Dame and creating a new parish under the Bishop of Senlis, superseding all existing parishes. Chantilly

3658-563: Was established in the rue de la Machine in 1730. Industrial buildings were built in 1780 at the end of the Grand Canal, to take advantage of the power provided by the waterfall. During the French Revolution, Chantilly became a commune whose which boundaries matched those of the parish. The first mayor was the administrator of the estate, André-Joseph Antheaume de Surval. The other city council members were recruited from among

3720-410: Was moved a hundred meters (yards) north to create the 2.5 km (1½ mile) long Grand Canal that runs in front of the château. The old riverbed became the 800 metre (½ mile) long Canal Saint-Jean, named after a 16th-century chapel demolished when the gardens were created. The Canardière, beneath the actual viaduct, was channeled and cleaned up at this time also. The Canal de la Machine, perpendicular to

3782-460: Was the royal grand bouteiller , a hereditary position in charge of the king's vineyards, and became the first lord of Chantilly, which at the time was little more than a rock in the middle of a swampy area. A strong house was mentioned in the area in a 1227 document. In 1282 an act of the Parliament of Paris mentions Chantilly Forest . A 1358 document mentions the destruction of the château in

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3844-401: Was thus established as autonomous. His grandson, Louis Henri, Duke of Bourbon , can be called the founder of the city, since he drew up the first city plans. He brought planning to the town design and renamed the rue Gouvieux the Grande Rue. After he built the Great Stables in 1721, he created a development in 1727 and sold lots for housing to court officials, holders of hereditary positions at

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