The Great Stables were built in 1719, on the orders of
Louis Henri, duke of Bourbon,
Prince of Condé, who believed that he would be
reincarnated as a horse. He asked the architect,
Jean Aubert, to build
stables that would be suitable to house a horse of his rank. The resulting 186 m long stables are considered a masterpiece of 18th century architecture. The stables could house 240 horses and up to five hundred
hounds. In 1830,
Henri d'Orléans, duke of Aumale, the fourth son of
King Louis-Philippe, inherited the château from his uncle, the Duc de Bourbon. In 1886, Henri bequeathed the château, the stables, the racecourse, and almost 8 km2 of forest land to the
Institut de France, with the stipulation that it should be preserved as it was. Riding master
Yves Bienaimé had begun his career in 1959, in the riding school housed in the stables. Twenty years later, he was struck by the state of neglect of the still-impressive building. He decided he would do what he could to bring back some of the former glory of the stables. On 6 June 1982, after four years of negotiations with the Institut over the concession, Yves and Annabel Bienaimé opened the museum to the public. Yves Bienaimé discovered
Marine Oussedik's art in
Equus magazine. He then asked her for works to be permanently displayed in two rooms of the museum. The first room was dedicated to Arabian horses in Arabian proverbs (in 1993) and the second one (in 1995) to the horse shows as performed within the Museum. ==Museum==