At the origin of the Plantier de Costebelle estate was a vast estate owned by Louis Jacques Odier, a member of the Sovereign Council of the Republic of
Geneva, as early as 1822. Dominique Honoré Peillon and his wife, née Marguerite Adélaïde Eydoux, residents of Hyères, became the new owners in 1840. Following the expropriation of Mr. Peillon and during a public auction on April 1, 1851, the estate was sold to Ernest Desclozeaux. The
July Monarchy had made him a magistrate. He was later elected deputy for Embrun in the
Hautes-Alpes. But after the
French Revolution of 1848, he withdrew from political life. In 1857, sold a plot of land to the
Baroness de Prailly. This marks the birth of the Plantier de Costebelle estate.
Baroness Hortense Pauline Husson de Prailly, Villa des Palmiers ).
Family origins and construction Hortense Chevandier de Valdrome (1813–1879) married in 1834 Baron Husson de Prailly (1804–1881), president of the civil court of first instance in
Nancy and officer of the
Legion of Honor. Both families originated from
Lorraine. Hortense de Prailly's father, , who had been elevated to the dignity of
Peer of France under the
July Monarchy, was director of the glassworks in
Cirey-sur-Vezouze, thanks to his marriage, under the
Empire, to a Miss Guaita. can be seen to the right of the building. of
Santa Sabina in
Rome, by
Théodore Chassériau (1840),
Louvre Museum At the age of 27, Hortense Chevandier de Valdrome regularly stayed in Italy (Pisa, Lucca, Rome) for health reasons. In July 1840, she stayed at the Baths of Lucca, a famous spa resort. She traveled to Rome in the autumn of 1840, where she was surrounded by a select French society and met
Father Jandel, prior of the Sainte-Sabine convent and originally from Nancy. In Rome, she hosted her brother, Paul Chevandier de Valdrome, and a friend,
Théodore Chassériau. The latter drew for her
Deux femmes dans une forêt (1841), an idealized representation of friendship. It was the harsh climate of their native lands—the
Château de Lettenbach, where Hortense de Prailly was born, and her
father's estate of Sainte-Catherine in the
Vosges—as well as the lady's fragile health that prompted the Praillys to settle on the lower slopes of Mont des Oiseaux, at Costebelle, on the shores of the
Mediterranean Sea. From 1841, Baroness de Prailly rented from Dominique Peillon and then from Ernest Desclozeaux a farm and the adjoining lands, which she would purchase sixteen years later, in 1857. A graphite drawing made in Rome in January 1841 by
Théodore Chassériau appears to be the only known portrait of Hortense de Prailly, then aged 28. She is depicted seated, turned slightly to the right. After being part of the drawing collection gathered by John Postle Heseltine, this portrait—at the time wrongly attributed to
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres—entered the
Ashmolean Museum in
Oxford in 1941, where it has been displayed ever since. After acquiring the various parcels from Ernest Desclozeaux and the Arène family, Baroness de Prailly undertook the construction of a
Palladian-style villa and commissioned an architect who, at that time and thanks to Mayor , oversaw all major public projects aimed at developing Hyères as a resort: Victor Trotobas (1807–1884). During the years of construction, she lived in the nearby farm by the construction site, which later became the guest house of the estate—the very place where Paul Bourget would host his guests starting in 1896. The villa was named "Villa des Palmiers." Baroness de Prailly took inspiration from the exotic garden of Château Denis in downtown Hyères, and with the help of Charles Huber, a horticulturist from Hyères, she recreated a landscaped park, integrating rare palm trees among native species. These palms were then exclusively marketed across France by the acclimatizer from Hyères: the
Phoenix dactylifera. She notably introduced
Yucca filifera, which flowered for the first time in France at the Villa des Palmiers in 1876. The exotic garden of the Villa des Palmiers was designed by the owners in the style of the that emerged on the
French Riviera and throughout the Mediterranean coast from the mid-century onward (such as Villa Victoria in
Grasse,
Hanbury at Capo Mortola,
Villa Thuret at
Cap d'Antibes, Villas Vigier and Les Tropiques in
Nice, Villas Valetta and Camille–Amélie in Cannes, , and especially the
Domaine des Cèdres in
Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat). The work undertaken was substantial, both for the construction of the villa and chapel and for the impressive enclosing wall ordered by the Baroness, which entirely encloses the five-hectare estate. It appears, moreover, that the wall's construction preceded that of the buildings. Along with their immediate neighbors, the Praillys planned the construction of a road serviced by an
omnibus.
Father Lacordaire and Monseigneur Dupanloup The Baroness also had a chapel built adjacent to the main house, which was blessed for the first time by her spiritual director, "her first and only true Father," the Dominican priest
Henri Lacordaire. In the final years of his life, Lacordaire was a regular guest at Costebelle. Father Lacordaire had known Hortense de Prailly since 1835, when he came to preach in
Nancy, and the baroness was only 22 years old; their first meeting took place at the Cirey glassworks, at the home of
Eugène Chevandier de Valdrome. Strangely, this chapel was more luxurious than the house itself. But the Baroness de Prailly was very devout, probably even more so than her brother
Eugène Chevandier de Valdrome, who served as Minister of the Interior in the
Émile Ollivier Cabinet, the government of reconciliation with the Catholics. Her sincere and fervent faith was noticed by those around her, and Madame Swetchine—Lacordaire's Russian friend and advisor—spoke of her being in a "state of possession". It is thus possible to consider the Baroness de Prailly as belonging to a circle concerned with religious revival, which included many
Legitimists. Certain letters from
Madame Swetchine support this view, mentioning a certain Baroness "de P." who was "completely exceptional". She also welcomed to the Villa des Palmiers the Legitimist writer
Armand de Pontmartin (1811–1890), known for his criticism of the
Encyclopedists, as well as Abbé Joseph Perdrau, parish priest of the
church of Saint-Étienne-du-Mont, and likely also . Another distinguished guest who was a regular at the home of Hortense de Prailly was the Bishop of
Orléans, Monseigneur
Félix Dupanloup, who frequently stayed there in 1877–1878. The famous Catholic orator divided his time in Hyères between the Villa Jenny—owned by , of a noble Orléans family and loyal diocesan—and the Villa des Palmiers, where he celebrated Mass in the chapel. Hortense de Prailly had horizontal stations arranged along a path winding through the slopes of her property for the bishop. At the Villa des Palmiers, Monseigneur Dupanloup met
Armand de Pontmartin, author of
Causeries littéraires, who had also been invited by his hostess in March 1878. As with Father Lacordaire, the Baroness de Prailly maintained extensive correspondence with Monseigneur Dupanloup. Adolphe Chevandier de Valdrome, Hortense de Prailly's paternal uncle and an officer under the
First Empire, also resided for many years at the Villa des Palmiers. This former aide-de-camp to General Détrès in Murat's army distinguished himself during the
Russian campaign and at
Danzig. He reunited with the Baroness de Prailly in
Rome in 1840. Hortense de Prailly began with him the series of religious conversions she inspired within her family. The Villa des Palmiers also welcomed the baroness's brothers: the Lorraine-born
Eugène Chevandier de Valdrome, an industrialist and authoritative minister in the 1870
Émile Ollivier Cabinet; the painter
Paul Chevandier de Valdrome; and his son Paul Armand, a future consular agent.
Berthe Husson de Prailly, Countess of Guichen Family origins The daughter of Madame de Prailly, Berthe (1835–1910), married Alphonse Luc Maxime du Bouëxic, Count of Guichen (1822–1894), on 29 September 1867. A squadron leader in the Chasseurs d'Afrique, the Count of Guichen belonged to the "du Tremblement" class at
Saint-Cyr. He was descended collaterally from the famous
Luc Urbain du Bouëxic de Guichen (1712–1790), who had fought in the
American War of Independence, enabling some of his descendants to become members of the highly exclusive
Society of the Cincinnati. Upon the death of the Baroness de Prailly in Hyères on 12 December 1879, the Countess of Guichen inherited the estate, and the Villa des Palmiers became her residence. The only surviving depictions of Berthe de Guichen as a child are three drawings by
Théodore Chassériau, made in Rome around 1840–1841. Two are half-length portraits of a child, facing forward, with the torso turned slightly left and right. One of these two (in graphite and stump), documented and often published, remained in the family until 1991 and entered the Paris art market in 1999. It is now part of the private drawing collection assembled by the Calvinist banker Jean A. Bonna of Geneva, who, besides his work with
Lombard Odier bank, chairs the
Martin Bodmer Foundation, one of the world's most prestigious private libraries, based in
Cologny. The third drawing, identified in a private collection by
Louis-Antoine Prat in 1996, depicts Hortense Pauline de Prailly holding her daughter Berthe on her lap.
Queen Victoria at the Villa des Palmiers On 23 March 1892, the Count and Countess of Guichen hosted
Queen Victoria, who had chosen Hyères as her holiday destination on the French Riviera. The monarch resided in Costebelle, possibly at the Villa des Palmiers before moving definitively to the Hôtel de Costebelle and the Hôtel de l'Ermitage. She arrived at her hosts' home accompanied by
Princess Beatrice and the chaplain of the Anglican Church of Costebelle, "All Saints Church," Reverend Archibald Knollys. As a token of gratitude, Victoria offered the owners of the Villa des Palmiers a rare variety of tulip, imported from
India, which still blooms in the park. The English-language press of the time closely followed the Queen's visit to the French Riviera, documenting her every move. It reported that Victoria visited the Guichen family multiple times and that a special path had been laid within the Villa des Palmiers to accommodate the Queen and her carriage, often pulled by Jacquot, the famous little gray donkey who drove her through the fragrant pine trails of Costebelle. During her outings in the small cart pulled by Jacquot, Lady
Balmoral (the Queen's pseudonym during private travels) visited nearby estates that welcomed her. She was always accompanied by her famous footman, a
kilted Scottish Highlander (seen in the background at right in an engraving, with beard and
bonnet), and by a close escort of about ten Bengal Lancers wearing turbans. Numerous villas were made available to the British court, to Prince
Henry of Battenberg, the Duke and Duchess of Rutland, or the Duke and Duchess of Connaught in Costebelle: the Villa des Palmiers first and foremost, but also the Villa Costebelle (Count de Léautaud), Villa Sylvabelle (
Duke Decazes), Villa Montclair (Duchess of Grafton), Villa Sainte-Cécile (
Ambroise Thomas), Villa des Oiseaux (owned by flutist
Paul Taffanel), Château Saint-Pierre-des-Horts (botanist Germain de Saint-Pierre), Villa La Boccage (Lady Charlotte Smith-Barry), Château de San Salvadour (), Villa Almanarre (Mr. and the Hon. Mrs. Clowes), Villa Luquette (Major Ellis), and the home of Mr. Arène at Font des Horts. In April 1892, as her stay in Hyères came to an end, Queen Victoria sent her thanks to the Count de Guichen through General Sir
Henry Ponsonby, Her Majesty's private secretary. The Guichen family, like all villa owners in the Costebelle district, had sent Princess Beatrice a bouquet of flowers for her birthday on 14 April 1892. In 1896, the Countess of Guichen, a widow for two years, parted with the Villa des Palmiers and retired to her château at
Cirey-sur-Vezouze, where she died on 30 October 1910.
Paul Bourget , owner of Le Plantier between 1896 and 1935. The master of the
psychological novel purchased the Villa des Palmiers from Berthe de Guichen in 1896 and, until his death in 1935, welcomed numerous prominent figures there. He is the one who gave the property its current name: Le Plantier de Costebelle. At the time, the season in Hyères was winter. Becoming a loyal winter resident, the novelist received many famous guests at Le Plantier—literary, political, medical, and military figures—such as:
Maurice Barrès,
Edmond Jaloux, Professor Grasset,
Pierre Benoit, (composer),
Jean-Louis Vaudoyer,
Henry Bordeaux,
Charles Maurras,
Francis Carco (who recounts in Bohème d'artiste the burglary his host suffered at Le Plantier),
Matilde Serao,
André Beaunier,
Gabriel Hanotaux (then Minister of Foreign Affairs), Professor
Charles Richet, Émile Ripert,
William James in 1900,
José-Maria de Heredia,
André Gide,
Marshal Joffre, General
Nivelle,
Henry James, , , and even
Lady Randolph Churchill and Cardinal
Anatole de Cabrières. In 1898, , a poet and Milanese friend, bequeathed to Paul Bourget some furniture that the author of
Le Disciple kept at Le Plantier de Costebelle. However, the most frequent guest at the Bourget household was
Edith Wharton (owner of the villa Sainte-Claire-du-Château since 1927), whom he had met in Newport in 1893 when the writer had received from
James Gordon Bennett Jr. a commission for a series of articles on the United States. Paul Bourget also held hope of welcoming his friend
Jules Claretie to Costebelle. When the novelist gifted him
Œuvres complètes, he included a handwritten dedication along with an original pen drawing with the caption: "Caricature of my house in Costebelle, Le Plantier, to invite my friend Claretie to come and visit his devoted, Paul Bourget." Charles Maurras described the world of the Hyères property where Bourget withdrew from society to engage in profound reflection: Very close to the high society of the
Third Republic, which the author of
Le Disciple frequented in
literary salons, the academician continued these social ties during the winter in Costebelle by often visiting the immediate neighbors of Le Plantier, Count and Countess de Léautaud Donine, who owned the Villa Léautaud, or the Arène family, who lived at the estate of La Font des Horts ("spring of the gardens"). Geographically, the five hectares of Le Plantier were enclosed between these two vast properties on the plateau of Costebelle. During the winter of 1925, Minnie Bourget fractured her femoral neck while getting out of a car on the esplanade of Le Plantier. The Bourgets were immobilized there for most of 1926. Bourget wrote
Le Danseur Mondain during this time. This fall was followed by
mental degeneration (Minnie had always been in fragile health; she had lived her role as wife in the adored shadow of the illustrious master, which added to her nervous fragility and psychosomatic fatigue a constant sense of guilt and an inferiority complex in a childless world). File:Minnie2.JPG|Minnie and her sister Betti David. File:Minnie1.JPG|Minnie Bourget in 1890. File:Polo1.JPG|Paul Bourget at Le Plantier around 1920. File:Polobo2.JPG|P. Bourget and H. Bordeaux at Le Plantier. File:Polobobo3.JPG|Paul and Minnie Bourget in front of the chapel. File:Conrad_12.JPG|Paul Bourget, Edith Wharton, and Joseph Conrad.
Descendants of Paul Bourget, contemporary period of Le Plantier The property of Le Plantier de Costebelle had been acquired by the marital community between Paul Bourget and Minnie David from Marie Catherine "Berthe" Husson de Prailly, widow of Mr. Alphonse Luc Maxime du Bouëxic, Count of Guichen, by deed recorded by Maître Patteson, notary in
Hyères, on January 29, 1896. The purchase price was 75,000 francs, half of which was paid in cash, the rest payable within five years. Minnie, who died on October 12, 1932, left Paul Bourget common in jointly acquired assets under the terms of their marriage contract recorded by Maître Hussenot-Desenonges on July 28, 1890. He became her universal heir (holograph will of Minnie Bourget dated December 21, 1927). In 1935, Paul Bourget left no heirs with a legal share in his estate, as certified in a notarized statement drawn up by Maître Hussenot-Desenonges, notary in Paris, on January 10 and 14, 1936. However, in his holograph
will and
codicil dated January 25 and August 14, 1935, filed in the official records of the said notary on December 26, 1935, the man of letters named as his joint universal legatees: General (1878–1978), originally from Savoie (Chambéry,
Les Mollettes), and his wife, Madame Daille, born Marie "Germaine" Eugénie Persinette-Gautrez (1886–1959), niece of
Paul Bourget. File:Federico Beltran Masses - Portrait de Germaine Daille, 1926.jpg|Germaine Gautrez by Federico Beltrán Masses, circa 1916-1918. Le Plantier can be seen on the right of the painting. File:Gautrez1926.jpg|1926. File:Communion_235.JPG|Communion 1897 File:Récompense_57.JPG|Silver Palm 1917 File:Croix_12.JPG|War Medal 1919
General Marius Daille Requisition of Le Plantier during the Second World War From the beginning of hostilities, the local authorities were concerned about the fate of Paul Bourget's property, as his nephew, General Daille, was then commanding the 45th Army Corps far from the Var coast. The prefect proposed to exempt the home of the illustrious writer from all requisition and servitudes. However, on October 10, 1943, the villa was requisitioned. As a precaution, the writer's archives and library were moved nearby to the villa La Coualo, at the home of Colonel Beaugier. The harsh fighting in Hyères that followed the Allied
landing in Provence on the Maures coast in August 1944 did not spare the property, which was ransacked by scavengers following the liberating troops.
Centenary ceremony of Paul Bourget's birth in 1952 On September 28, 1952, General Marius Daille, nephew by marriage and heir of the academician Paul Bourget, gathered the writer's friends at the Plantier de Costebelle to celebrate the centenary of his birth and to affix two commemorative plaques at this site that had inspired the novelist. Several locations in Hyères, near the Plantier de Costebelle, served as settings for four of his novels:
Lazarine (1917),
Laurence Albani (1919),
Le Danseur Mondain (1926), and part of the novel
Le Fantôme (1901). In addition,
Le Roman des Quatre (1923), written in collaboration with
Henri Duvernois,
Pierre Benoit, and
Gérard d'Houville, takes place in Hyères, more precisely in Giens. Several short stories are also set in the surroundings of the Plantier de Costebelle: ''Voyageuses, Les Pas dans les pas, L'Eau Profonde
, and Le Justicier''. The ceremony was presided over by Gérard Bauër, Secretary General of the
Académie Goncourt, and Mayor Joseph Clotis. It was followed by a photography exhibition in the Park Hotel's function hall. File:Dejussieu-pontcarral_29.JPG|Interior of Le Plantier with objects and paintings belonging to the novelist. File:Gondran_1.JPG|Gérard Bauër meets Paul Bourget at Le Plantier and befriends General Daille (circa 1919). File:Gondran_2.JPG|Paul Bourget's office at Le Plantier de Costebelle with a photo of Guy de Maupassant, circa 1929. File:Alfred_1.JPG|Library at Le Plantier with photographs of the Bourgets' bedroom and office in Paris, 1927. File:Alfred_2.JPG|The dining room at Le Plantier de Costebelle, preserved in its original state by General Marius Daille, 1930. File:Alfred_3.JPG|Illumination, a devotional work by Berthe de Prailly, preserved at Le Plantier de Costebelle by Mr. Daille, circa 1870, signed. File:Cérémonie_1932_1.JPG|Joseph Clotis unveils the plaque commemorating the centenary of Paul Bourget's birth. File:Cérémonie_1932_2.JPG|Gérard Bauër, Solia, Joseph Clotis, and Marius Daille in 1952 at Le Plantier for the centenary.
Donation of the novelist's paintings to the Chambéry Museum in 1980 As the heir to Paul Bourget's estate and without descendants, General Marius Daille, who had lived full-time at the Plantier de Costebelle since the early 1960s, contacted the mayor of
Chambéry (his family roots were in Savoy),
Pierre Dumas, in 1972 to consider a potential donation of his collection of Sienese primitive paintings displayed in his Var residence. This collection notably included the
polyptych of
the Retable de La Trinité by
Bartolo di Fredi. In February 1973,
Michel Laclotte, Chief Curator of the Paintings Department at the Louvre Museum, visited the Plantier de Costebelle to study this unique collection. Under the guidance of Jean Aubert, curator of the Chambéry Museum, negotiations moved from a simple donation with usufruct to a payment-in-kind (dation) arrangement with the
works placed on deposit at the Chambéry museum.
Emmanuel de Margerie, Director of the Museums of France, also visited the Plantier de Costebelle on December 30, 1975, to examine the collection and consider submitting certain pieces to the Interministerial Approval Commission. The general involved his grand-nephew and heir, Admiral Gérard Daille, in these negotiations. After Marius Daille's death in 1978, Gérard took over the process. On November 14, 1980, the dation decree was signed, and four works from the
Sienese school from Paul Bourget's collection entered the
Louvre's paintings department to be deposited at the
Fine Arts Museum of Chambéry. The arrival of the Sienese artworks from the Plantier de Costebelle into the national collections allowed for a full restoration of these panels between 1981 and 1987 by the restoration service of the General Inspection of Classified and Controlled Museums. One of the panels from
La Trinité, which appeared to depict a sainted bishop, was heavily repainted, hiding its true identity: it was
Saint Dominic.
Admiral Gérard Daille Admiral Gérard Daille, a grand-nephew of , born February 6, 1916, in
Chambéry and deceased January 6, 2000, in
Arcachon, became the legal successor of his great-uncle Marius Daille. He lived at the Plantier between 1978 and 1996. In 1996, he sold the property, which was divided between two separate owners: on the one hand, the main house of the Plantier, the chapel, the botanical park, the gatehouse, and 3.8 hectares of land; on the other hand, the farm and stables (formerly Paul Bourget's guesthouse) with 1.2 hectares. When the Plantier left the Bourget/Daille family in 1996, numerous archives were transferred to the
Hyères museum: death masks and hand imprints, the academician's ceremonial outfit, a plaster bas-relief of Paul Bourget by Roussel, photographs, objects (including a hunting trophy from the Chantilly pack of Mgr the Duke of Chartres, 1897), and archives from the Gautrez family. == Architecture of a Neo-Palladian villa ==