Friday, 8 July 2016

Sedan Chair and Vinaigrette

Versailles is made of gardens, paths, courtyards, galleries, antechambers and private rooms. But what we can forget when visiting Versailles today is the multitude of sedan chairs of all shapes and forms that obstructed all these places during the biggest part of the Ancient Regime. Here is an example of those abandoned modes of transportation, now very rare, which we try to acquire, save and restore whenever possible. 




The one on the left is a fairly common sedan chair; the one on the right with the wheels is called a vinaigrette. The name supposedly comes from the "vinaigriers" or vinegar sellers who, apparently, used a similar mode of transportation to carry their goods. As the vinaigrette, if used in Versailles, was anyway limited to courtyards or ground level rooms at the most, you could access fairly far into an apartments, even the king's one, in your sedan chair, if you were a member a the royal family. We'll try to present these vehicles (and hopefully nicer ones!) in context inside the palace when we have restored rooms suitable to accommodate them.

3 comments:

  1. Quite amazing to see that they survived to this day, and in such a good condition too!
    I'm guessing many have been used as fire wood as they got obsolete with time.
    Are they still used today in Couteau by some eccentric VIPs or are they only found in museums?

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    1. Well Monica, that seems incredible, but the "vinaigrette" (the sedan chair with the wheels) was still spotted as a VIP transportation mode in the streets of Couteau in the early 2010"s ! It was, apparently, quite useful for some "consequent" (in term of weight) VIPs to navigate among the narrow winding streets of the Middle Ages District among other places. The sedan chair in general being very fragile (generally made of a wood frame and canvas, to be as light as possible, because two poor chaps had to carry it afterwards!), they quickly disappeared when we stopped to use them, plus they were indeed burnt or destroyed on purpose for being a symbol of the nobility.

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