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Hôtel Lambert

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File:Polonez Chopina ball w Hotelu Lambert.jpg
"Chopin's Polonaise - a Ball in Hôtel Lambert in Paris", water colour and gouache, 1849-1860, painted by Teofil Kwiatkowski, National Museum in Poznań: the vaulted décor was temporary

Hôtel Lambert is an hôtel particulier on Quai Anjou on the Île Saint-Louis, Paris IVème and the namesake of a 19th century political faction of Polish exiles.

History

The house on an irregular site in the heart of Paris was designed by the architect Louis Le Vau, and built between 1640 and 1644 for the financier Claude Lambert de Thorigny, president of the Chambre des Comptes. The interiors were decorated by Charles Le Brun, Gerard van Opstal and Eustache Le Sueur, producing one of the finest examples of 17th century domestic architecture in France. Both painters worked on the internal decoration for almost five years, producing the gallant allegories of the grand Galerie d'Hercule and the small Cabinet des Muses and Cabinet de l'Amour; the paintings have since been dispersed.

A entrance gives onto the central square courtyard round which the hôtel is ranged. A wing extends to the right at the rear, embracing a walled garden. At the same time Louis Le Vau constructed a residence for himself right next to the Hôtel Lambert. He lived there between 1642 and 1650. It was the birthplace of all of his children and the deathplace of his mother. After the architect's death in 1670 his hôtel was bought by the La Haye family, who owned the other palace as well. Both buildings were then joined and their façades combined.

In the 1740s, the Marquise du Châtelet and Voltaire, her lover, used the Hôtel Lambert as their Paris residence when not at her country estate in Cirey. The Marquise was famed for her salon there. Later, the Marquis du Châtelet sold the Lambert to Claude Dupin and his wife Louise-Marie Dupin, who carried on the tradition of the salon. The Dupins were ancestors to the writer George Sand.

In 1843 the palace was bought by members of the Czartoryskis, a mighty Polish magnate family. Two of its members, Konstanty Adam and Adam Jerzy Czartoryski were leaders of the liberal-aristocratic faction of the Polish Great Emigration, which came into being after the collapse of the November Uprising 18301831 in Poland. The political group was formed around the latter and his palatial dwelling lent its name to the faction.

The political beliefs of the Hotel Lambert faction were derived from the May 3rd Constitution that the members supported. The Hotel Lambert played an important part in keeping the "Polish question" alive in European politics, by promoting the Polish cause. It also served as a safe harbour for Polish emigrants and royalists, exiled from their country after the unsuccessful uprising against Russia. Among the notable politicians taking part in Hotel Lambert's activities were Władysław Czartoryski, Józef Bem, Henryk Dembiński, Karol Kniaziewicz, Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz, Władysław Stanisław Zamoyski and Władysław Ostrowski.

Initially a political think-tank and a discussion club, with time the political faction also started to work on preservation and promotion of the Polish culture. A Polish language library was founded in the palace, as well as a historical society, two schools teaching in Polish (one for girls and one for boys) and several other notable social and cultural organisations. With time, it became one of the most important centres of Polish culture in the world, especially after the January Uprising, when the Polish language and culture became heavily persecuted in Poland itself.

Among the notable guests and patrons of the Hôtel Lambert were some of the most notable artists and politicians of the epoch, including Frédéric Chopin, Zygmunt Krasiński, Alphonse de Lamartine, George Sand, Honoré de Balzac, Hector Berlioz, Franz Liszt, Eugène Delacroix and Adam Mickiewicz. Chopin's "La Polonaise" was composed exclusively for the Polish ball held there every year.

The Polish library founded in Hôtel Lambert exists to this day, though it was moved to a different place.

In the twentieth century the Hôtel Lambert was dicreetly split into several luxurious apartments; it was once the home of actress Michèle Morgan and of Mona von Bismarck and to Baron Alexis de Rédé who rented the ground floor from 1949 until his death in 2004; he entertained there his intimate friend Arturo Lopez-Willshaw, who continued to maintain a formal residence with his wife, in Neuilly: their dinner parties were at the center of le tout Paris. In 1956, at Alexis de Redé's Bal des Têtes, young Yves Saint-Laurent provided many of the headdresses and received a boost to his career. In 1975 the Hôtel Lambert was purchased by Baron Guy de Rothschild, whose wife, Marie-Hélène de Rothschild was a close friend of Rédé; they used it as their Paris residence.

See also

References

48°51′03″N 2°21′34″E / 48.85083°N 2.35944°E / 48.85083; 2.35944