Fodor's Expert Review Château de Monte-Cristo

St-Germain-en-Laye Historic Home

If you're fond of the swashbuckling novels of Alexandre Dumas, you’ll enjoy the Château de Monte-Cristo at Port-Marly on the southern fringe of St-Germain. Dumas built the château after the surging popularity of books like The Count of Monte Cristo made him rich in the 1840s. Construction costs and lavish partying meant he went broke just as quickly, and he skedaddled into a Belgian exile in 1849. You may find the fanciful exterior, where pilasters, cupolas, and stone carvings compete for attention, crosses the line from opulence to tastelessness, but—as in Dumas’s fiction—swagger, not subtlety, is what counts. Dumas’s mementos aside, the highlight of the interior is the luxurious Moorish Chamber, with spellbinding, interlacing plasterwork executed by Arab craftsmen (lent by the Bey of Tunis) and restored thanks to a donation from the late Moroccan king Hassan II.

Historic Home

Quick Facts

1 av. du Président-Kennedy
St-Germain-en-Laye, Île-de-France  78100, France

01–39–16–49–49

www.chateau-monte-cristo.com

Sight Details:
Rate Includes: €8, Closed Mon. Apr.--Oct., and Sat.--Mon. Nov.–Mar.

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