At the end of the 15th century,
Charles VIII of France invited Italian architects and garden designers to France to create an Italian garden for his
Château d'Amboise. In the 16th century, the development of the Baroque garden in France was accelerated by
Henry IV of France and his Florentine wife,
Marie de' Medici. Their first major project in the style was the garden of the
Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris. The new garden, on the bluff above the
Seine, featured an extensive
belvedere with ramps and stairways, scattered with an assortment of pavilions, grottoes, and theatres. Following the assassination of the King, his widow built a palace and a garden of her own, now called the
Jardin du Luxembourg. She planted groves of full-grown trees and laid out
parterres, alleys and fountains on the model of the gardens of her native Florence. The French Baroque garden reached its summit under
Louis XIV, due to his garden designer,
André Le Nôtre. Le Nôtre's first large-scale project was for
Vaux-le-Vicomte, the château of the King's
Superintendent of Finances,
Nicolas Fouquet, built between 1656 and 1661. The central feature of this garden was a main axis descending from the château, composed of a series of terraces decorated with parterres of low hedges in ornamental designs. Large basins with ''
jeux d'eau'' were placed along the central axis, and the garden was set between rows of trimmed trees on the left and right, to lead the eye on the long perspective to the last fountain and grotto below. The garden was meant to be seen from the château, which overlooked it like the box of a theater. The young Louis XIV had Fouquet imprisoned for his extravagance, but greatly admired the garden he created. He commissioned Le Nôtre to design a similar, but vastly larger, garden, for his own projected
Palace of Versailles. The most famous Baroque gardens were the
Gardens of Versailles created by Le Nôtre between 1662 and 1666. It was built around the original small square park of ninety-three hectares before the château started for
Louis XIII by
Jacques Boyceau in 1638. In 1662 following the model of Vaux-le-Vicomte, Le Nôtre made the park ten times larger, centered on a grand canal which reached to the horizon. The new park was divided into an elaborate grid of flowerbeds, paths, and alleys, decorated with fountains and sculptures. A third enlargement expanded the park by another six thousand five hundred hectares, including forests for hunting and several nearby villages, surrounded by a wall forty-three kilometres long with twenty-two gates. The centrepiece of the garden was the
Fountain of Apollo, the symbol of Louis XIV, the sun king himself, surrounded by a network of paths, basins, colonnades, theaters, and monuments. The King himself designed the route that visitors should follow, with twenty-five different mythological scenes, stations, and panoramas. The garden became an outdoor theatre for pageants, promenades, theatre performances, and fireworks shows. Its greatest deficiency was insufficient water for all of the fountains; only a few fountains could work at the same time; they were turned on only when the King was approaching them. Between 1676 and 1686, Louis XIV built a smaller version of the Versailles gardens at the
Château de Marly, located in a more tranquil valley, where he could escape from the crowds of Versailles. After his death in 1715, portions of the Gardens of Versailles were gradually modified to the new style of an English landscape garden, with trees untrimmed and planted in more natural groves, winding paths, and replicas of Greek temples and even a picturesque
model village for the amusement of
Marie Antoinette. The gardens of Versailles had many royal visitors, including
Peter the Great of Russia, and many of its features were imitated in other European palace gardens. File:Kasteel van Vaux-le-Vicomte - Maincy 06.jpg| Garden of
Vaux-le-Vicomte seen from the château (1656–1661) File:Adam Perelle, View of Versailles, garden facade, 1680s.jpg|View of the garden façade of
Palace of Versailles in 1680s File:Plan du Jardin des Tuileries par Israel Silvestre 1671 - Gallica 2011 (adjusted).jpg|Plan of the
Tuileries Garden (about 1671) File:Marly 1724.jpg|Gardens of the
Château de Marly (1724) ==Germany==