Valançay Square
Valançay Square.
A secluded, remote, and peaceful resting place established in eighteen fifty-eight, evoking memories from her time in France and her youth. At its center, there was a pavilion, which has not survived to this day, reminiscent of an open garden gazebo. The name is associated with the suburban residence of the Talleyrand family in Valançay located in the Loire Valley. Duchess Dorothea de Talleyrand-Périgord stayed there from eighteen nine to eighteen forty, until her return to Prussia. After the death of her patron and uncle Maurice de Talleyrand (eighteen thirty-eight), she inherited the title of Dino and all his French estate. From here, directly into the dense forest, we reach the fairytale Elves' Place.
A secluded, remote, and peaceful resting place established in eighteen fifty-eight, evoking memories from her time in France and her youth. At its center, there was a pavilion, which has not survived to this day, reminiscent of an open garden gazebo. The name is associated with the suburban residence of the Talleyrand family in Valançay located in the Loire Valley. Duchess Dorothea de Talleyrand-Périgord stayed there from eighteen nine to eighteen forty, until her return to Prussia. After the death of her patron and uncle Maurice de Talleyrand (eighteen thirty-eight), she inherited the title of Dino and all his French estate. From here, directly into the dense forest, we reach the fairytale Elves' Place.