In 1343, salt became a state monopoly by order of the Valois king
Philip VI, who established the
gabelle, the tax on salt.
Anjou was part of the "great gabelle" area and encompassed sixteen special tribunals or "salt granaries", including that of Richelieu. The village was a 17th-century model "
new town". It was built at the order of
Cardinal Richelieu (1585–1642), who had spent his youth there and bought the village of his ancestors; he had the estate raised to a
duché-pairie August 1631. He engaged the architect
Jacques Lemercier, who was already responsible for the
Sorbonne and the Cardinal's
hôtel in Paris, the
Palais Cardinal (now the Palais-Royal). With the permission of King
Louis XIII, he created from scratch a walled town on a grid arrangement, and, enclosing within its volumes the modest home of his childhood, an adjacent palace, the
Château de Richelieu, surrounded by an ornamental moat and large imposing walls enclosing a series of entrance courts towards the town and, on the opposite side, grand axially-planned formal vista gardens of
parterres and gravel walks, a central circular fountain, and views reaching to an
exedra cut in the surrounding trees and pierced by an avenue in the woodlands extending to the horizon. The pleasure grounds were enclosed in woodland; since their innovative example was followed and extended at
Vaux-le-Vicomte and in the
gardens of Versailles, and since
André Le Nôtre's father was employed at Richelieu in 1629, and it is not improbable that the young boy was employed as well, it is worth making a detailed survey. Construction took place between 1631 and 1642 – the year of the Cardinal's death – and employed around 2000 workers. A smaller chateau built for the Cardinal's mistress is located 4 km outside the town. ==Geography==