Madame de Pompadour


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She remained with him, until her death in 1764.
Introduced in the Court by well-placed connections, she caught the King's eye and soon became his official mistress.
For her Louis XV commissioned the Petit Trianon, which became a private haven of peace.

At age 5 Jeanne Antoinette was sent to receive the finest quality education of the day in a convent in Poissy, where she gained admiration for her wit and charm.
During this time, her mother took her to a fortuneteller, Madame de Lebon, who predicted that the girl would one day reign over the heart of a king.
Henceforth she became known as Reinette, meaning "little queen"

Once married, Le Normant d'Ćtiolles fell passionately in love with his wife.
The couple had a son who died in infancy and a daughter, Alexandrine, born in 1744, who died at the age of nine.

Here, she caught the eye of KingLouis XV, and he was immeadiately smitten.
Later that same year, he brought her to the Palace of Versailles, providing her with an apartment just above his own.
A secret staircase allowed the monarch to access his mistress's apartment, without being seen.

Madame de Pompadour had a fondness for truffle soup, chocolate and champagne, but she wasn't a silly airhead, she was also just as keen to nourish her intellect.
Her bourgeois, non-aristocratic roots however, soon drew harsh criticism from certain members of the nobility.

After moving to the ground floor of the main wing of Versailles in 1751, her role changed from that of mistress to confidante.
Jeanne oversaw new construction projects, and busied herself primarily with her patronage of the arts.
In 1751 she supported the publication of the first two volumes of Diderot and d'Alembert's 'Encyclopaedia'

Jeanne also persuaded the king, to build the Petit Trianon on the grounds of Versailles.
Two years later, in 1753, Louis XV purchased the HĆ“tel d'Evreux – now known as the ElysĆ©e Palace – for her to use as a place to stay while visiting Paris.

Louis had even nursed her through her illness.
Even her enemies admired her courage, during the final painful weeks.

Looking at the rain during the departure of his ex~mistress's coffin from Versailles, the devastated king reportedly said:
"La marquise n'aura pas de beau temps pour son voyage."
"The marquise will not have good weather for her journey".
She was buried at the Couvent des Capucines in Paris.
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Madame de Pompadour as 'Diana the Huntress' by Jean~Marc Nattier 1746
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