3 favorites     0 comments    89 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

03
Vichy regime
Philippe Pétain
Reine des villes d'eaux
Queen of Spas
Great Spas of Europe
La Véranda
Casino-Théâtre
Charles Badger
Marquise de Sevigné
Pierre I de Bourbon
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
France
Jugendstil
Art Nouveau
UNESCO World Heritage
Vichy
Allier
Palais des Congrès
Grand Casino
Charles Lecœur


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

89 visits


Vichy - Palais des Congrès

Vichy - Palais des Congrès
The place was founded by the Romans at springs already used by them.

In 1344, Duke Pierre I de Bourbon obtained the possession of the lands. In 1410, a monastery of the Benedictines was founded here. In 1527, the Bourbon possessions reverted to the French crown. At the end of the 16th century, the first patients came to Vichy for the healing springs, which were soon considered to be true "miracle springs".

The springs of Vichy became famous thanks to the Marquise de Sevigné, who came here for a cure in 1676 and 1677. She praised its healing properties. In 1761, two daughters of Louis XV came here for a cure. Their nephew, Louis XVI, had a new bath complex built at the springs in 1787. Napoleon's mother stayed here for a cure in 1799. It is attributed to her influence that the emperor had the "Parc de Sources" laid out in 1812. In 1830, the spa house was inaugurated. Napoleon III made Vichy his summer residence for several years. The town became a fashionable spa for the international aristocracy.

From 1899 to 1903 following the construction of the Centre Thermal of the Dome with the drinking hall, a 700-meter-long ambulatory and a bath in oriental style were erected. Around 1900, 40,000 spa guests per year came to Vichy, and shortly before World War I, the number was nearly 100,000.

During World War II, the town became the headquarters of the French Vichy regime under Philippe Pétain.

After the war, Vichy resumed spa operations and once again acquired the title of "Reine des villes d'eaux" ("Queen of Spas"). But that changed in the 1970s, when the celebrities among the bathers preferred other resorts.

Together with ten other spas of Europe the "Great Spas of Europe", Vichy was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2021.

The "Palais des Congrès", where the Parliament granted constitutional powers to Marshal Pétain in 1940.

This once was the Grand Casino ("Casino-Théâtre"), designed by Charles Badger in 1865 at the request of Napoleon III. The original building included a ballroom, a theater, and gambling and amusement rooms. But Vichy's fame was such that in 1900 Charles Lecœur was commissioned to extend the building to the west: the new Art Nouveau theater with its 1,486 seats was the result.

Since 1995 now this is the "Palais des Congrès - Opéra"

Marco F. Delminho, Alexander Prolygin, Paolo Tanino have particularly liked this photo


Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.