Born in
Paris, he was a pupil of
Jean Le Pautre and the son of
Jean Marot, who was also an architect and engraver. Marot was working independently as an engraver from an early age, making engravings of designs by
Jean Bérain, one of Louis XIV's official designers at the
Manufacture des Gobelins, where far more than
tapestry was being produced. The family were
Huguenots and were part of the wave of émigrés who left France in the year of the
Edict of Fontainebleau and
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) to settle in Holland. Much of the furniture, especially the mirrors,
guéridons and state beds, in the new State Rooms readied for William at Hampton Court bears unmistakable traces of his authorship; the tall and monumental embroidered state beds, with their plumes of ostrich feathers, their elaborate valances and cantonnieres agree very closely with his later published designs as he was the son of Gole's sister-in-law. He married Gole's niece. ==Engravings==