France

Domaine de Fontainebleau

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The Domaine de Fontainebleau is an evolving cultural landscape and proposed as an extension of the WHS Palace and Park of Fontainebleau. The property includes extensive parks and forests surrounding the castle and the town of Fontainebleau. The Forest of Fontainebleau was the hunting ground of the French monarchs and is known for its sandstone rocks with peculiar shapes resembling elephants or tortoises. Parts of the forest are included in the TWHS Ancient and Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians and Other Regions of Europe (France).

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
Domaine de Fontainebleau : château, jardins, parc et forêt (ID: 6493)
Country
France
Status
On tentative list 2020 Site history
History of Domaine de Fontainebleau
2020: Added to Tentative List
Added to tentative list
Criteria
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org

Community Reviews

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First published: 06/06/22.

Daniel C-Hazard

Domaine De Fontainebleau

Domaine de Fontainebleau (On tentative list)

Domaine de Fontainebleau by Daniel C-Hazard

The Forest of Fontainebleau is huge in area (for a Central European forest) and nice to visit. The various sandstone formations scattered around, in particular the Place du Cuvier, form the birthplace of the sport of bouldering, and the landscape inspired the so-called Barbizon school of painters, who gathered in the village of the same name on the edge of the forest. However, I do not fully understand why the area should receive another WHS status. A large fraction is already protected under the WHS "Ancient and Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians and Other Regions of Europe", including the areas around the Ermitage de Franchard, Les Gorges d’Apremont [visit/hike recommended] and Place du Cuvier. Barbizon (village) itself is nice but not unique enough in my humble opinion but that said, it does not seem to be within the nominated area anyway, which is called "Domaine de Fontainebleau: château, jardins, parc et forêt". Finally, the impressive Palace of Fontainebleau and its surrounding parks and gardens are a WHS since 1981. Thus, everything from "château" to "forêt" is already WH-protected, and I do not see the need for duplications.

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First published: 31/05/19.

Jakob Frenzel

Domaine De Fontainebleau

Domaine de Fontainebleau (On tentative list)

Domaine de Fontainebleau by Jakob Frenzel

August 2018 - we decided to do the tour along the WHS sites south of Paris. Coming from Chartres we drove through the Foret de Fontainebleau to finally reach the castle.

We only did one single stope to take a short hike to some rocks. From the street, it appears like a nice deep forest. If its an old beech forest, it should be included in the beech forestst of Europe.

the area is pretty oslated, not many town, or tourist spots. But The castle is worth a trip.

 

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First published: 24/04/19.

Grendel Gongan

Domaine De Fontainebleau

Domaine de Fontainebleau (On tentative list)

Domaine de Fontainebleau by Grendel Gongan

I visited the Forest of Fontainebleau in large part because I was in the midst of a long trip to Paris and wanted a few days away from the crowds (I also wanted to see the Chateaux of Fontainebleau and Vaux le Vicomte, neither of which disappointed). I was vaguely familiar with the Barbizon School of painters, which is why the village of Barbizon caught my eye as a place to stay. I'm happy to report a visit to the forest is absolutely worth it. Even on the very hot, fairly busy weekend I visited (over the Bastille Day holiday), you could see why a school of French painters, inspired by the great Dutch and English landscape artists, were drawn here. The landscape is covered in gorges, craggy rock formations, and forests that are delightfully cool (let me reiterate just how absurdly hot it was when I visited) that would be interesting in and of themselves. Knowing that the landscape here is what inspired a generation of artists to reject the strictures of the French Academy and to (unknowingly) lay the foundations of Impressionism and the many Modernist movements that followed makes it unique and, to my mind, absolutely deserving of World Heritage status.

You could certainly see the Forest of Fontainebleau on a day trip from Paris, but if you can stay a night or two I'd recommend it (I stayed two and wish I'd stayed at least one more night). I really enjoyed Barbizon, which remains an …

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