Thursday 25 August 2022

THE CHALLENGES OF HYGIENE IN THE DAILY LIFE OF VERSAILLES : VERSAILLES' DIRTY SECRETS - Toute L'Histoire


The Smelly History of French Royals at the Palace of Versailles

Beneath its opulence, the palace had a dirty secret that no visitor would ever forget

Sajjad Choudhury

May 14, 2021

https://historyofyesterday.com/the-smelly-history-of-french-royals-at-the-palace-of-versailles-e55238fc1072

 

IIt’s the 18th century, and you’re in the grand palace of Versailles, the seat of French power and royalty. You gaze at the ornate paintings and beautiful marble structures only to be distracted by something that seems off. It’s a smell but not one that you’d expect from a majestic palace; it reeks of feces and urine.

 

Everywhere you go, you’re reminded of the foul stench that emanates from the walls, from the cesspits, and even from the gardens. No place is safe.

 

Although today we think of Versailles as an architectural masterpiece, to the people living there, it was like being in a smelly nightmare. But how did it get so bad, and why did the French nobility tolerate such horrible conditions?

 

The answer lies in common hygiene practices or the lack of them.

 

Disease Riddled the Court

Louis XIV (1638–1715) was known to have only bathed three times in his entire life. Although the palace of Versailles had running water and numerous baths, there was a common belief that water spread disease, so the less you bathed, the safer you were. As a result, the king would often encourage his courtiers not to bathe at all.

 

Of course, you can imagine what would happen if hundreds of people who never bathed roamed around a palace in close proximity; awful body odour!

 

Not everyone had access to a bath anyway. Although the king and other aristocrats would wipe themselves with a wet cloth, the baths were usually reserved for intimacy rather than for cleanliness.

 

Instead, the emphasis was placed on washing one’s face rather than one’s body, leaving many to wonder how so many courtesans and mistresses were at the palace.

 

The sheer amount of people, along with the squalid filth in which they lived, led to the spread of syphilis, a disease that riddled the nobility at Versailles and plagued the court up until the French Revolution.

 

Smallpox was another terror, and two epidemics swept through Paris in 1719 and 1723. There was no cure, and if you did survive, it would leave pockmarks on your face, or if you were really unlucky, turn you blind. It infiltrated the palace of Versaille as well and famously killed Louis XV.

 

But it wasn’t just disease affecting the body that plagued Versailles. The lack of hygiene practices meant that many French aristocrats would be infested with lice. Compound this with the fact that you could lose hair as a side effect of syphilis, and it’s no wonder why many opted to wear wigs.

 

We like to imagine that the powdered wigs were for fashion, but they were merely designed to hide the fact that many men and women simply shaved their heads. The irony was that the same practice was employed by Ancient Egyptians over 2000 years ago!

 

The lice would still infest the wigs, but it was much easier to clean them than your own natural hair as you could immerse the wig in boiling water which would kill any nits or eggs.

 

Still, this was an accepted way of life, and no one was safe from disease because no one practised proper hygiene, not even the rich and wealthy who appeared to be more susceptible than even the masses.

 

Only Clean Clothing Was Important

The one thing that the French nobility did maintain was their clothing. Bedsheets and undergarments were made of linen as it was believed that these could absorb dirt and grime.

 

When filth was everywhere, wearing a clean white shirt was seen as a sign of wealth. Consequently, Louis XIV would change his shirt multiple times a day and reportedly change his undergarments three times a day too!

 

However, this rule did not extend to outer garments, which would be tricky to wash due to being made from fur or being covered in jewellery. Some of these garments would likely never be washed and instead be left to dry out in the air. While some aristocrats had a huge wardrobe of clothes to choose from, lesser nobles could not afford them and had to make do with wearing smelly clothes.

 

Of course, good clothes didn’t mask the stench of body odour or even foul-smelling breath. Louis XIV developed a fistula between his mouth and nose, which caused his breath to smell bad. Many other nobles suffered from poor dental hygiene as well, with the king's spouse, Maria Theresa having really bad teeth by the time she was 22 and married.

 

So how did the French royalty cover these smells up? By spraying copious amounts of perfume.

 

Louis XIV’s mistress, Madame de Montespan, bathed in water scented with vanilla and applied heavy doses of perfume because she couldn’t stand the king’s smell.

 

Masking bad smells with perfume became such a trend that many nobles had their own ‘brands’.

 

It became the custom for people of rank to superintend the making of the special fragrances they favoured. The Prince of Condé, for instance, always had his favourite snuff scented in his presence. The Duchesse d’Aumont’s scent was known as ‘à la Maréchale’ (she was married to the Marshall of France), and was created from coriander, sweet flag (iris) and nut grass. Madame du Barry‘s favourite scent came from an Italian perfumer, Giovanni Maria Farina: Aqua Mirabilis, the original eau de Cologne (as it became known as), upliftingly scented with bergamot, neroli, lavender, rosemary, in grape spirit.

 

As the years went on, the role of the perfumer became more glamorous. A young man named Jean-Louis Fargeon caught the attention of Marie-Antoinette, the wife of Louis XVI, and he was later invited to become her chief perfumer.

 

So the next time you apply some French fragrance, remember its origin. Remember that a few hundred years ago, it wasn’t just used to enhance a person’s scent; it was also used to mask the hideous smell of body odour, bad breath, and sweat and grime.

 

The Palace Itself Was Filthy

During the 18th and 19th centuries, people would do their business in chamber pots. These would be thrown into a cesspit or, more commonly in some cases, be thrown out the window. However, large palaces like Versaille were awash with feces and urine. In the Royal Art of Poison, Eleanor Herman described how:

 

‘Some courtiers didn’t bother to look for a chamber pot but just dropped their britches and did their business — all of their business — in the staircase, the hallway, or the fireplace’

 

In a 1645 report of the Louvre Palace in Paris:

 

‘On the grand staircases’ and ‘behind the doors and almost everywhere one sees there a mass of excrement, one smells a thousand unbearable stenches caused by calls of nature which everyone goes to do there every day.’

 

The situation at Versaille, however, was grimmer. There could be 10,000 people on a given day, and all the waste that accumulated had to go somewhere, right?

 

According to historian Tony Spawforth, a lot of this was simply thrown outside. Marie-Antoinette was once hit by human waste as she walked through the inner courtyard, prompting her courtiers to rush back and get a new pair of clothes.

 

And if that wasn’t bad enough, pipes carrying waste would sometimes leak into bedrooms, and blockages would cause a buildup of toxic fumes leading to even more sickness.

 

Even the gardens weren’t safe from the filth.

 

‘The passages, the court yards, the wings and the corridors were full of urine and fecal matter. The park, the gardens and the chateau made one retch with their bad smell’

 

One of the reasons for this was that Versailles was built on former marshland, and some areas still retained a foul odour. When summer came, this was even worse as the smell would mingle with the sweat, feces, and grime creating a truly pungent mix.

 

No matter where you were, inside the palace or outside in the courtyards, the stench was everywhere!

 

The squalor of Versailles wasn’t unique to France, and many palaces throughout Europe were just as filthy. But what made Versailles far worse was its sheer size, both in how much land it took up, as well as the number of people that inhabited it.

 

With no concern for personal hygiene, it was inevitable that it would reek of filth. It makes you wonder that if this was how the upper classes lived, how bad must it have been for the masses?

 

While today we can gaze at the opulence and grandeur of Versailles, let’s not forget that beneath the rose-tinted view, it harboured a very smelly secret that lasted for centuries.


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