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Madame de Pompadour

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson marchioness de Pompadour

Madame de Pompadour, detail of a portrait by François Boucher; in the National Gallery of …
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Madame de Pompadour, detail of a portrait by François Boucher; in the National Gallery of … (credit: Courtesy of the National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh)
(born Dec. 29, 1721, Paris, France — died April 15, 1764, Versailles) French mistress of Louis XV. Educated in art and literature, she married Charles-Guillaume Le Normant d'Étoiles in 1741 and became admired by Parisian society and by the king, who installed her at Versailles as his mistress in 1745. She obtained a separation from her husband and was created marchioness de Pompadour. She, the king, and her brother, appointed director of the king's buildings, planned and built the École Militaire and the Place de la Concorde in Paris, the Petit Trianon Palace at Versailles, and many other buildings. She and Louis also encouraged painters, sculptors, and craftsmen, making her 20 years in power the height of artistic taste. Her political influence was less astute; the alliance with Austria against the German Protestant princes that she urged led to the disastrous Seven Years' War.

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French Literature Companion: Antoinette Poisson Pompadour
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Pompadour, Antoinette Poisson, marquise de (1721-64). The most celebrated mistress of Louis XV came from a wealthy middle-class background. She exerted a very considerable political influence for 20 years, and was an enlightened patron of artists and writers, including many of the philosophes.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Jeanne Antoinette Poisson Le Normant d'Étioles marquise de Pompadour
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Pompadour, Jeanne Antoinette Poisson Le Normant d'Étioles, marquise de (pŏm'pədôr, Fr. zhän äNtwänĕt' pwäsôN' lə nôrmäN' dātyôl' märkēz' də pôNpädūr'), 1721-64, mistress of King Louis XV of France. She was the king's mistress for about five years after 1745 and remained his confidante until her death. Of middle-class origin, she owed her success mainly to her intelligence and capabilities. She urged the appointment of the duc de Choiseul and other ministers and encouraged the French alliance with Austria, which involved France in the Seven Years War. The extent of her influence over state policy has, however, been exaggerated. She was a tastemaker in matters of art and culture, favoring Voltaire and other writers of the Encyclopédie, employing many artists to decorate her residences, and encouraging the manufacture of Sèvres ware and other luxury goods.

Bibliography

See biographies by J. Levron (tr. 1963), N. Mitford (2d ed. 1968), C. Pevitt Algrant (2002), and E. Lever (tr. 2002); C. Jones, Madame de Pompadour: Images of a Mistress (2002); study by M. Crosland (2000).

Dictionary: Pom·pa·dour   (pŏm'pə-dôr', -dōr', -dʊr', pôN-pä-dūr') pronunciation, Marquise de (Title of Jeanne Antoinette Poisson.) 1721-1764.
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The lover of Louis XV of France. She was blamed for establishing France's alliance with Austria, which led to the Seven Years' War (1756-1763).


History 1450-1789: Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson Pompadour
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Pompadour, Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson (1721–1764), artistic and political patron and favorite of Louis XV from 1745 to 1764 at the court of Versailles. Pompadour was born Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson to François and Louise-Madeleine Poisson in Paris. She was groomed for court by her uncle and alleged father, Lenormant de Tournehem, and, educated by the Ursuline order, became proficient in literature, mathematics, religion, history, the arts, and music and as an amateur artist and actor. Tournehem's ties to Parisian society opened doors for Pompadour to the celebrated salons of Mesdames Marie-Thérèse Geoffrin, Claudine-Alexandrine Guérin de Tencin, and Marie Vichy-Chamrond, marquise du Deffand. Pompadour's heritage connected her to the financial class of the farmers-general, and her background as a non-noble caused great resentment when she arrived at Versailles. Her portraits reveal her beauty and intellect; the iconography identifies her patronage of the arts and the Enlightenment.

Pompadour married Tournehem's nephew Charles-Guillaume d'Etoiles in 1741, and initially their stable union was founded on love. They had two children, a son, born in 1742, who died suddenly, and a daughter, Alexandrine, born in 1744. Alexandrine's death in 1754 from acute appendicitis and peritonitis shattered Pompadour. Marriage bound her forever to the tax farmers, and later questions about her financial ties advanced by her foes at court discredited her throughout her life. Tournehem, a prominent farmer-general, fashioned and educated Pompadour from her childhood for the intimate quarters of Louis XV, whose predilection for royal mistresses was legendary. What began initially between the king and Pompadour as flirtations on horseback and a tryst at a masked ball resulted in her marital separation and presentation at court in 1745. In that same year Louis XV conferred the marquisate de Pompadour on his new mistress, who shared the king's bed for nearly five years. In 1750 she began the transition from mistress to friend and remained at court for fifteen more years as the king's closest adviser and friend.

The extent of Pompadour's influence reaped high praise from her admirers as well as intense scorn from those who vilified her power during the period when France faced monumental challenges in the War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–1748, and the Seven Years' War, 1756–1763. The Children's Riots of 1750, the assassination attempt on Louis XV in 1757, and debates about moral reform dominated Pompadour's ascendancy from 1745 to 1764 and anticipated the French Revolution in 1789. Pompadour was part of these currents of intersecting artistic, political, intellectual, and moral change. Though she was initially dismissed as vain and frivolous by some historians, scholars have come to consider the discerning and influential nature of her impact on eighteenth-century culture. Pompadour played a key role in the arts and politics; to understand the sea changes of this period, one must consider her position within it.

As a political patron, Pompadour participated in the diplomacy surrounding the War of the Austrian Succession and the Seven Years' War, unprecedented for a king's mistress. Her connection to prominent generals demonstrated her keen input in military affairs. By 1756 she was a principal negotiator in the terms of the Diplomatic Revolution and alliance between France and Austria. Pompadour's artistic patronage is seen through reform initiatives first instituted in 1745 at the French Academy of Painting and Sculpture under her appointees as director-generals of the royal buildings of the king, Tournehem, and her brother, the marquis de Marigny. From the rococo to the early stages of neoclassicism, Pompadour employed art as a force for change, patronizing artists and sculptors from François Boucher (1703–1770) to Jean-Baptiste Pigalle (1714–1785). One of her lasting contributions included relocating the Manufacture Royale de Porcelaine from Vincennes to its new site in Sèvres in 1756. Her advisory role at Sèvres and in other factories, including Beauvais, Gobelins, and Aubusson, revived the strapped coffers of France, reinstating governmental protection and ownership by 1759.

Pompadour endorsed the embattled Encyclopédie throughout the censorship of the 1750s. She hosted intellectual gatherings at Versailles and in 1762 wrote on behalf of the philosophe Jean Le Rond d'Alembert (1717–1783), one of the Encyclopédie's authors. She was ideologically aligned with the Physiocrats, providing fuel against the critics of economic, intellectual, and cultural change. The association Pompadour discerned between aesthetics and philosophy inspired her to express basic tenets of natural law through the art she favored, particularly chinoiserie (the decorative arts). Remarkably Pompadour's influence was greatest after she left the king's bed. A virulent street discourse relentlessly indicted her as complicit in the monarchy's failings, yet she defied her critics. It was observed that Pompadour had not been afraid to joke that, if the irate mudslingers were right in their opposition to the Encyclopédie, burn it; if not, burn the mudslingers. Her achievements resulted from collaborative political negotiations and numerous artistic commissions and the state institutions she supported. Deffand sadly wrote to Voltaire of the misfortune of Pompadour's impending death from bronchial pneumonia. She left Versailles in a solemn nighttime procession, with Louis XV grieving in her wake. The time line of France from 1745 to 1764 bears Pompadour's unforgettable purpose to serve Louis XV with loyalty and love.

Bibliography

Goodman, Elise. The Portraits of Madame de Pompadour: Celebrating the Femme Savante. Berkeley, 2000.

Jones, Colin. Madame de Pompadour: Images of a Mistress. London, 2002.

Lever, Evelyne. Madame de Pompadour: A Life. Paris, 2000.

Pompadour, Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, marquise de. Correspondance de Mme de Pompadour avec son père M. Poisson, et son frère M. de Vandières. Edited by M. A. P. Malassis. Paris, 1878.

—ROSAMOND HOOPER-HAMERSLEY

Wikipedia: Madame de Pompadour
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Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, duchesse de Pompadour

Madame de Pompadour, portrait by François Boucher
Born December 29, 1721(1721-12-29)
Paris, France
Died April 15, 1764 (aged 42)
Paris, France
Occupation Maîtresse-en-titre to Louis XV
Spouse(s) Charles-Guillaume Le Normant d'Étiolles
Children 1 A son
2 Alexandrine-Jeanne d'Étiolles
Parents François Poisson, Madeleine de la Motte

Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, Marquise de Pompadour, also known as Madame de Pompadour (29 December 1721 – 15 April 1764), was a member of the French court, and was the official maîtresse-en-titre of Louis XV from 1745 to 1750.

Contents

Life

Childhood and education

Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson was born on 29 December 1721 in Paris to François Poisson and his wife Madeleine de la Motte. However, it is suspected that her biological father was either the rich financier Pâris de Montmartel or the tax collector (fermier général) Le Normant de Tournehem,[1] who became her legal guardian when François Poisson, a steward to the Pâris brothers—foremost financiers of the French economy—was forced to leave the country in 1725 after a scandal over a series of unpaid debts, a crime at that time punishable by death. Poisson was cleared eight years later and allowed to return to France. Her younger brother was Abel-François Poisson de Vandières who would later become the marquis de Marigny.

Jeanne-Antoinette was intelligent, beautiful, and refined. She spent her younger childhood at the Catholic Ursuline convent in Poissy where she received a good education. At adolescence, her mother took personal charge of her education at home by hiring teachers who taught her to recite entire plays by heart, play the clavichord, dance, sing, paint and engrave. She became an accomplished actress and singer, and also attended Paris's Club de l'Entresol (formed in 1724 and suppressed in 1731). The greatest expense of her education was undoubtedly the employment of renowned singers and actors, such as Pierre Jélyotte, much of it paid for by Le Normant de Tournehem; and it may have been this in particular that sparked rumours of his paternity to Jeanne-Antoinette.

She later claimed that, at the age of nine, she was taken by her mother to a fortune teller and told that she would someday reign over the heart of a king.[citation needed] Apparently, her mother believed the prophecy and accordingly nicknamed her "Reinette".

Marriage

Mme de Pompadour, pastel by Maurice Quentin de La Tour, shown at the Paris Salon, 1755 (Louvre Museum)

In 1741, at the age of nineteen, Jeanne-Antoinette was married to Charles-Guillaume Le Normant d'Étiolles, nephew of her guardian, who accepted the match and the large financial incentives that came with it. These included the estate at Étiolles (28 km south of Paris), a wedding gift from her guardian, which was situated on the edge of the royal hunting ground of the forest of Sénart. With her husband, she had two children, a boy who died the year after his birth in 1741 and Alexandrine-Jeanne (nicknamed "Fanfan"), born 10 August 1744. Contemporary opinion supported by artwork from the time considered the young Mme d'Étiolles to be quite beautiful, with her small mouth and oval face enlivened by her wit. Her young husband was soon infatuated with her and she was celebrated in the fashionable world of Paris. She founded her own salon, at Étiolles, and was joined by many of the great philosophes, Voltaire among them.

Versailles

As Mme d'Étiolles became known in society, the King came to hear of her. In 1745, a group of courtiers, including her father-in-law, promoted her acquaintance with the monarch, who was still mourning the death of his second official mistress, the duchesse de Châteauroux.

Jeanne-Antoinette was invited to a royal masked ball at the Palace of Versailles on the night of 25 to 26 February 1745, one of the many fêtes given to celebrate the marriage of the Dauphin Louis de France (1729-1765) to the Infanta Maria Teresa of Spain (1726-1746). At the chosen moment in the Grand Ballroom, eight costumed figures appeared, dressed as yew tree hedges, one of which was the King in disguise. By chance or design, Jeanne-Antoinette, dressed as a shepherdess, had found her prey and soon the King removed his headdress and engaged her in courtly conversation. By March, she was the King's mistress, installed at Versailles in an apartment directly below his. On 7 May, the official separation between her and her husband was pronounced.[2]

On 24 June, after the funds had been advanced to the Crown by Pâris de Montmartel, the purchase contract of the marquisate of Pompadour, with title and coat-of-arms, was signed, and Louis XV gave the estate to Jeanne-Antoinette, making her a marquise[3] for, in order to be presented at court, she required a title. On 14 September, Jeanne-Antoinette was formally introduced to the court by the king's cousin, the princesse de Conti. She quickly mastered the highly-mannered court etiquette, although initially it is said the king joked to his close friends that he would have much to teach her (clearly referring to her bourgeois roots)[citation needed]. Unfortunately, her mother died on 25 December of the same year, and did not live to see her daughter's achievement at becoming the undisputed royal mistress, who was to command considerable power and soon become embroiled in the world of politics, alliances and conspiracies.

Politics

Madame de Pompadour, portrait by François Boucher circa 1750, detail

Contrary to popular belief, the marquise de Pompadour never had much direct political influence, but supported the Maréchal de Belle-Isle and endorsed the duc de Choiseul to the king. However, she did wield considerable power and control behind the scenes, which was highlighted when another of the king's mistresses, Marie-Louise O'Murphy de Boisfaily, "la belle Morphyse", attempted to replace her around 1754. In 1755, the younger and less experienced Morphyse was married off to an Auvergne nobleman, Jacques de Beaufranchet, seigneur d'Ayat (Lord of Ayat) [4]and uncle of the illustrious General Louis Desaix, who fought during the French Revolution under General Napoleon Bonaparte. Their son (1757-1812), Louis Charles Antoine de Beaufranchet, a maréchal de camp, was present at the execution of Louis XVI.[5]

The marquise de Pompadour had many enemies among the royal courtiers, who felt it a disgrace that the king would thus compromise himself with a commoner. She was very sensitive to the unending libels called poissonnades, a pun on her family name, Poisson, which means "fish" in French. Only with great reluctance did Louis take punitive action against known enemies such as the duc de Richelieu[citation needed].

Her importance was such that she was even approached in 1755 by Wenzel Anton Graf Kaunitz, a prominent Austrian diplomat, asking her to intervene in the negotiations which led to the 1756 Treaty of Versailles (1756)[citation needed]. This was the beginning of the so-called Diplomatic Revolution, which temporarily lessened the long antagonism between France and Austria.

This alliance eventually brought on France's participation in the Seven Years' War, with all its disasters, like the loss of New France in Canada to the British and the defeat at the hands of the Prussians in the Battle of Rossbach, in 1757. After Rossbach, she is alleged to have comforted the king saying this now famous by-word: "au reste, après nous, le Déluge" ("After us, the Deluge")[citation needed]. France emerged from the war diminished and virtually bankrupt.

However, Mme de Pompadour persisted in her support of these policies, and when Cardinal de Bernis failed her, she brought Choiseul into office and supported him in all his great plans: the Pacte de Famille, the suppression of the Jesuits and the Treaty of Paris (1763) sealing the loss of Canada[citation needed]. Britain's victories in the war had allowed it to surpass France as the leading colonial power - something which was commonly blamed on Pompadour.

Reasons for the Marquise de Pompadour’s lasting influence over Louis XV

There were several reasons for the marquise de Pompadour’s lasting influence over Louis that distinguished her from past mistresses. First, she decidedly established a cordial relationship with Marie Leszczyńska. [6] The Queen had been snubbed by the king’s previous mistresses but de Pompadour realized that showing respect for Marie eased Louis’ guilt and allowed him to have a strong relationship with his children. She also put all of her effort into bringing fun into the melancholy life of the King. Unlike his wife or the other females in Louis’ life the marquise de Pompadour accompanied him while hunting, playing cards, and touring properties. [7] She also threw dinner parties for him and put on plays that exalted him. Lastly, the royal mistress continuously reminded Louis of her beauty by frequently commissioning paintings, mostly by Francois Boucher, that highlighted her exquisite features and hid her aging looks. [8]

Positions at court

The marquise de Pompadour was an accomplished woman with a good eye for Rococo interiors. She was responsible for the development of the manufactory of Sèvres, which became one of the most famous porcelain manufacturers in Europe and which provided skilled jobs to the region. She had a keen interest in literature. She had known Voltaire before her ascendancy, and the writer, essayist, philosopher apparently advised her in her courtly role. She also discreetly endorsed Diderot's Encyclopédie project. After the War of the Austrian Succession, when economy was the thing the French state needed most, she drew more and more resources into the lavish court. Her influence over Louis increased markedly through the 1750s, to the point where he allowed her considerable leeway in the determination of policy over a whole range of issues, from military matters to foreign affairs[citation needed].

Her memorial portrait finished in 1764 after her death, but begun while she was alive, by her favourite portraitist, François-Hubert Drouais

Mme de Pompadour was a woman of verve and intelligence. She planned buildings like the Place de la Concorde and the Petit Trianon with her brother, the Marquis de Marigny. She employed the stylish marchands-merciers, trendsetting shopkeepers who turned Chinese vases into ewers with gilt-bronze Rococo handles and mounted writing tables with the new Sèvres porcelain plaques. Numerous other artisans, sculptors and portrait painters were employed, among them the court artist Jean-Marc Nattier, in the 1750s François Boucher, Jean-Baptiste Réveillon and François-Hubert Drouais (illustration, right). Moreover, she defended the Encyclopédie edited by Diderot and d'Alembert.

Death

Mme de Pompadour suffered two miscarriages in 1746 and 1749, and she is said to have arranged lesser mistresses for the King's pleasure to replace herself. Although they had ceased being lovers after 1750, they remained friends, and Louis XV was devoted to her until her death from tuberculosis in 1764 at the age of forty-two. Even her enemies admired her courage during the final painful weeks. Voltaire wrote: "I am very sad at the death of Madame de Pompadour. I was indebted to her and I mourn her out of gratitude. It seems absurd that while an ancient pen-pusher, hardly able to walk, should still be alive, a beautiful woman, in the midst of a splendid career, should die at the age of forty." Yet, at the time of her death, many enemies were greatly relieved and she was publicly blamed for the Seven Years' War. Looking at the rain during the leaving of his mistress' coffin from Versailles, the King reportedly said: "La marquise n'aura pas beau temps pour son voyage." ("The marquise won't have good weather for her journey.")

Popular Culture

On Screen

Madame de Pompadour has been depicted on screen in film and television on many occasions, beginning with Madame Pompadour in 1927, in which she was played by Dorothy Gish. Other actresses to have played her include:

  • Anny Ahlers (Die Marquise von Pompadour, 1931);
  • Jeanne Boitell, (Remontons les Champs-Élysées, 1938);
  • Micheline Presle, (Si Versailles m'était conté, 1954);
  • Monique Lepage, (Le Courrier du roy, 1958);
  • Elfie Mayerhofer (Madame Pompadour, 1960);
  • Noemi Nadelmann (Madame Pompadour, 1996);
  • Katja Flint, (Il Giovane Casanova, 2002);
  • Sophia Myles (as adult) and Jessica Atkins (as child) ("The Girl in the Fireplace" - an episode of the BBC science fiction series Doctor Who, 2006. She is a primary and titular character in the episode, as well as the name of the 51st century spaceship in the story) [11]
  • Hélène de Fougerolles (Jeanne Poisson, Marquise de Pompadour, 2006).

Other

  • Madame Pompadour, a German operetta with music by Leo Fall and book and lyrics by Rudolph Schanzer and Ernst Welisch that also had successful adaptations in London (1923) and Broadway (1924).
  • She was the subject of several portraits throughout her lifetime.[1]
  • During the musical Evita by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, she is mentioned by an Argentine senator, comparing Eva Perón to her.
  • In the anime Le Chevalier d'Eon, she is portrayed as a character that monitors the movements of d'Eon and his men against the Revolutionary brethren. She is voiced by Mayumi Yangisawa in Japanese and by Shelley Calene-Black in the English dub.
  • According to legend, the navette-cut or marquise diamond was commissioned by Louis XV to resemble the mouth of Madame de Pompadour.
  • In the Robert A. Heinlein novel Have Spacesuit Will Travel, the female protagonist 'Peewee' is accompanied by her 'nurosis', a rag doll named Madame Pompadour.

See also

References

  1. ^ Antoine, Michel, Louis XV, Fayard, Paris, 1989, p. 493, (French).
  2. ^ ib. Antoine Louis XV, pp. 493-495.
  3. ^ ib. Antoine Louis XV, p. 495.
  4. ^ ib. Antoine Louis XV, pp. 504-505.
  5. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=aVAA_Mba2aIC&pg=RA1-PA430&lpg=RA1-PA430&dq=Louis+Charles+Antoine+de+Beaufranchet+ex%C3%A9cution+Louis+XVI&source=web&ots=XSSBe_Lcjy&sig=se3oSg8dR8lRx2tXh0MurtOLi4o&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result#PRA1-PA430,M1.
  6. ^ ib. JonesThe Fabrication of Madame de Pompadour, pp 39-42.
  7. ^ ib. JonesThe Fabrication of Madame de Pompadour, p 39.
  8. ^ ib. JonesThe Fabrication of Madame de Pompadour, p 40.
  9. ^ a b Holmes, Richard (2002) (paperback). Redcoat. London: HarperCollins. pp. 43. ISBN 0-00-653152-0. 
  10. ^ Adams, Cecil (1985-09-27). "Were champagne glasses modeled on the breasts of Madame de Pompadour?". Straight Dope. http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_151.html. Retrieved 2007-05-06. 
  11. ^ Pixley, Andrew (2006-11-06, cover date). "Episode 4: The Girl in the Fireplace". Doctor Who Magazine — Series Two Companion (Special Edition 14): 44–50. 

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