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What is the largest privately owned château in France?

Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte: the largest private historical monument in France has been inhabited by the same family for 150 years.



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The Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, greatest Historical Monument in France, is currently owned by the Vogüé.

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How much does it cost to organize your wedding at Chateau de Vaux le Vicomte ? The average budget of a wedding celebrated in Chateau Vaux le Vicomte is around €1million, a price fit for a royal and extravagant wedding. Smaller weddings and parties are of course possible – and run in the €400 000 ballpark.

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The wedding held for Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, and Princess Salama in 1981 has gone down in history as having the most expensive wedding to date. In preparation for the wedding, a 20,000-seat stadium was built especially for the couple.

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The State has owned the castle since 1930. In 1939, thousands of works of art were sent from museums in Paris to eleven castles and abbeys in central and western France, including Chambord, to escape destruction or theft by the Nazis.

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Why these properties are so seemingly cheap is obvious to the French: The castles are a money-suck. They demand constant repairs. The lower-priced ones are often located in isolated areas, far from the nearest train station or grocery store. They consume massive amounts of energy.

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However, Louis XIV intervened, exercising his prerogative to overrule the judges and imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. This was the only time in French history a Monarch used his pardoning power to worsen the sentence. Fouquet was then incarcerated in Pignerol, where he died on March 23, 1680.

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Maintenance costs and expenses represent a significant sum, corresponding to at least 20,000 euros per year for a medium-sized chateau, about 80,000 euros for a bigger chateau, or even 100,000 to 150,000 euros for a very big chateau with employed permanent staff (such as a gardener, handyman, etc…).

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If you're looking to buy a property in need of TLC, knock it into shape and put it back onto the market, in the hope of earning a quick profit, a château may not be the right choice. Not only because of the reasons mentioned above but also as they tend to stay on the market for a long time before finding a new owner.

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The château has six floors, 45 rooms (“ish”, they laugh, “it depends how you define 'room',”), an orangery, a barn, a pig shed, a walled garden, a “lavoire-du-château”, a moat and 12 acres of woodland, its scale accounting for eight series.

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