Episode 3-Marie Antoinette, Marriage Bed to the Necklace Affair

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Episode 3-Marie Antoinette, Marriage Bed to the Necklace Affair

Episode 3- Marie Antoinette Part Deux. 

The marriage bed to a necklace that brought down a queen 

When we left off in last week's podcast episode, part une of Marie Antoinette she had just married Louis XVI and became the Dauphine of France. Just 14 years old, embarking on a life and the future queen of France with a tragic end we know so well. 

On the night of May 16, following a long day of ceremony and parties the young couple took to their bed. The bed was blessed by the Archbishop while members of the court watched, closing the curtain the two were left somewhat alone. However, nothing would happen, nothing would happen for seven years. 

The issues in the bedroom was the talk of France and even past its borders. How can the now king rule from the throne if he couldn’t even give the country an heir. Marie Antoinette’s mother was also quite concerned and let her know what her important role was. During this time to avoid the constant rejection of her husband she turned to friends, parties, all night gambling. The rumors began to turn to her and how she spent her time. 

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Finally after seven long years the marriage was consummated and the next year their first child was born. Marie-Therese Charlotte, born in 1851. Not the male heir apparent, but a beautiful baby girl. Spending the days with her mother at the Petit Trianon and the Hamlet, living a quiet life away from the watchful eyes. 

Three more children would bless the couple, Louis Joseph in 1781, the Dauphin who would die before he turned 8, Louis Charles born in 1785, a life that would have a tragic end and Marie Sophie in 1786 that would die in 1787. 

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The talk of the spending of the court while the coffers were empty was picking up momentum in France. Marie Antoinette’s shopping for dresses, shoes and jewelry didn’t play out well when people were starving. She became the perfect unknowing victim of a plot that would be her downfall. 


Jeanne de la Motte would use this to her advantage. In 1772 King Louis XV wanted to have a necklace made for his mistress Madame du Barry and asked jewelers Boehmer & Bassange to create a lavish gift. Taking years to gather the more than 600 diamonds needed, Louis XV would die before it was finished. Left with a very expensive necklace on their hands without being paid they reached out to Louis XVI thinking he would want to buy it for his queen. With a very high price tag, the queen refused telling her husband “we have more need of 24 ships”. However, it could also be that she never liked Du Barry and didn’t want to have anything intended for her. 

Jeanne de la Motte was a young woman who was the illegitimate descendant of Henri II. Her father had lost his money and she wanted to take back what she thought they deserved. Mistress of the Cardinal Rohan (remember him from Part One), who had a falling out with the Queen and her mother was desperate to get back into her good graces. Jeanne told him she was friends with the Queen and that if he wrote her a letter she would get it to her. Jeanne had another agenda. She answered the letters herself, posing as the Queen and when he begged to have a private meeting with the Queen she hired a prostitute at the Palais Royal to impersonate the Queen and met him in the Grove of Venus at Versailles. 

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Once word had spread throughout Paris, the jewelers reached out to Jeanne in hopes to appeal to Marie Antoinette and to buy the necklace.  Jeanne told Rohan that the Queen wanted the necklace but needed someone to get it for her. Jeanne forged a letter and a purchase order for the necklace and he took it to Boehmer. Handing over the necklace to Rohan, he then took it to meet Jeanne and what he thought was one of the Queen’s valets. It was Jeanne’s husband who promptly took the necklace, broke it apart and sent the jewels around Europe to be sold. 

Months went by and when Boehmer still hadn’t been paid he went to the court with the order signed by the Queen. She had never seen it before. Rohan was arrested in the Hall of Mirrors, would go on trial and be found innocent. Jeanne de la Motte would also be arrested, sentenced to prison but would break out one day dressed as a boy and flee to London. 

For the Queen who was innocent in the plot, it was too late. It only fed into the rumors of her excess. People even thought she orchestrated the entire thing to get back at Rohan. The Affair of the Diamond Necklace led to her final fall that was to come in just a few years. 

Today that necklace would be worth over $15 million dollars and held 2800 carats and 685 diamonds. When I saw a replica at the exhibit at the Conciergerie I gasped, but then again I love an over the statement piece. 

Be sure to listen to the episode for even more 


Coming up next Monday, Part Troi, Marie Antoinette. The Final Years  

Support my writing and stories of Paris by joining my Patreon page and get lots of extra goodies including discounts on my tours in Paris, trip planning and custom history just for you. Patreon link in bio.

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Episode 2- Marie Antoinette, from Vienna to Dauphine

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Episode 2- Marie Antoinette, from Vienna to Dauphine

Episode 2- Marie Antoinette, From Vienna to Dauphine 

Born in Vienna in 1755, she was the 15th of 16 children to Empress Marie-Theresa and Francis I, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.  Spending her days at Schönbrunn Palace running and playing with her brothers and sisters until at the age of 11 it was decided she would marry the next king of France, the Dauphin Louis-Auguste. 

Her mother was very strong and tried to instill the virtues her daughter would need to be as a queen. Marie Antoinette wasn’t that willing of a participant and had a short attention span for anything she didn’t like, a problem that would haunt her until her last days. 

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After the death of Francis I, Marie-Theresa was able to do what she wanted. With hopes of finally uniting France and Austria and ending years of conflict, she offered her daughter's hand to Louis XV. It would take three years and some convincing of Louis XV but after dispatching his own people to be sure she was ready, at the age of 14, Marie-Antoinette was on her way to France. 

On May 7, she arrived at the banks of the Rhine for the “surrender of the wife”. Stepping into a lavish tent she walked in one side representing Austria, stripped all her belongings and clothes and redressed in  the finest French clothes and emerged as the Dauphine. 


Marie Antoinette wanted to stop for mass in Strasbourg. With the Bishop away, a clergy member greeted her, his name was Louis-Prince de Rohan. Rohan will come back into her life later in a key moment that contributed to her downfall. She would finally meet her husband on May 14, just two days before their lavish wedding at Versailles. 


Listen to even more on our newest episode of La Vie Creative, Paris History Avec A Hemingway.

I’ve also added some of my favorite Marie Antoinette books in the Boutique.

Support my writing and stories of Paris by joining my Patreon page and get lots of extra goodies including discounts on my tours in Paris, trip planning and custom history just for you. Patreon link in bio.

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Episode 1- Suzanne Valadon

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Episode 1- Suzanne Valadon

Our first episode focuses on the fascinating life of muse and artist Suzanne Valadon

Danse à la ville  & Danse à la campagne by Renoir

Danse à la ville & Danse à la campagne by Renoir

Suzanne Valadon at a very young age would work as a model for some of the biggest French painters of the 19th C. Meeting them on the streets of Montmartre she would sit for Henner, Steinlen and Toulouse-Lautrec. Although her most famous collaboration may have been with Renoir. In Danse a la Ville and Danse a Bougival both painted in 1883 Renoir used her as his model depicting very different scenes. Valadon in La Ville is elegant and controlled, but in Bougival she is distant, her partner looks to be trying to get her attention. Renoir loved working with her as did Toulouse-Lautrec.

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While she posed she soaked up the techniques of each of these masters, storing them away in her mind until she picked up her own paintbrush just as she turned 30 years old. Degas came into her life and admired her paintings and her style, encouraging her to continue and bought her paintings to hang in his home. 

Young girl in front of a window by Suzanne Valadon 1930

Young girl in front of a window by Suzanne Valadon 1930

Suzanne’s relationships are many and have overshadowed her talent for years. Marriages and a son that never knew who his father was and had a host of his own issues. Suzanne attempted suicide, alienated her biggest supporter Degas but still managed to cut out a life for herself.

Musée de Montmartre

Musée de Montmartre

Today you can still see Suzanne in Paris hanging on the walls of the Orsay and the Pompidou.  Renoir’s Danse à la campagne et Danse à la Ville, two in the series of the three are in the Orsay. All three were modeled by Suzanne but the jealous rage of his lover Aline Charigot and her scraping at the painting forced Renoir to change the model for la Ville to Charigot. 

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Suzanne’s very own paintings and drawings can be found in the Pompidou. However if you want to get a personal view of her life, head to the Musée de Montmartre. Her former studio and apartment is part of the museum. Walk into her studio where her former easels, chairs and art fill the space with its huge windows. 

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To learn more about Suzanne, check out Catherine Hewitt’s fantastic book about Suzanne Valadon. Renoirs Dancer: The Secret Life of Suzanne Valadon.

Listen to our first episode here, so excited to share it with you

Support my writing and stories of Paris by joining my Patreon page and get lots of extra goodies including discounts on my tours in Paris, trip planning and custom history just for you. Patreon link in bio.

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