Tourist information -
Chambéry
Chambéry , 55km north of Grenoble, lies
just south of the Lac du Bourget in a valley separating the Chartreuse
Massif from the Bauges mountains, historically an important strategic
position commanding the entrance to the big Alpine valleys leading
to the passes into Italy. The present town grew up around the château
built by Count Thomas of Savoie in 1232, when Chambéry became
capital of the ancient province, and flourished particularly in
the fourteenth century. Although superseded as capital by Turin
in 1563, it remained an important commercial and cultural centre
and the emotional focus of all French Savoyards: "the winter
residence of almost all the nobility of Savoy", Arthur Young
reported in 1789, before its mid-nineteenth-century incorporation
into France. Today, however, Chambéry is a provincial town
offering a couple of fairly good sights but otherwise little excitement.
Halfway down the broad, leafy boulevard de la Colonne is the splendidly
extravagant Fontaine des Éléphants , an elaborate
homage to himself by the Comte de Boigne, a native son who made
a fortune in the French East India Company in the eighteenth century.
Just south of this on square de Lannoy-de-Bissy is the Musée
Savoisien (daily except Tues 10am-noon & 2-6pm; 20F/?3.05),
which records the lost rural life of the Savoyard mountain communities.
On the first floor are some very lovely paintings by Savoyard primitives
and painted wood statues from various churches in the region; up
above are tools, carts, hay-sledges, old photos, and some very fine
furniture from a house in Bessans, including a fascinating kitchen
range made of wood and lined with lauzes (slabs of schist).
Next to the museum, in the enclosed little place Métropole,
the cathedral has a handsome, though much restored, Flamboyant facade.
The inside is painted in elaborate nineteenth-century trompe l'?il
, imitating the twisting shapes and whorls of the high Gothic style.
The cathedral's treasury (May-Aug daily 3-6pm; free) is worth a
look for a very early ivory diptych and a thirteenth-century pyx
(a case for holding the Eucharist).
A passage leads from the square to rue de la Croix-d'Or , with
numerous restaurants and the Italianate Théâtre Charles
Dullin , named after the avant-garde director who was born in the
region. To the right, there's the long, rectangular place St-Léger
, with a fountain and more cafés, where street musicians
and players perform on summer evenings. Rousseau and Mme de Warens
lived here in 1735, and also had a country cottage, Les Charmettes,
just 2km south of the town on the rustic chemin des Charmettes.
It's now the Musée Jean-Jacques Rousseau (Wed-Sun: July &
Aug 10am-noon & 2-6pm; rest of year 10am-noon & 2-4.30pm;
20F/?3.05), containing personal possessions of the famous philosopher.
Towards the northern end of the square, the town's smartest street,
rue de Boigne , to the right, leads back to the Fontaine des Éléphants.
But if you continue past this intersection, on the left, a narrow
medieval lane, rue Basse-du-Château, brings you out beneath
the elegant apse of the Ste-Chapelle , the castle chapel, whose
lancet windows and star vaulting are in the same late Gothic style
as the cathedral. It was built to house the Holy Shroud, that much-venerated
and today highly controversial piece of linen brought back from
the Crusades and reputed to bear the image of the dead Christ. The
dukes took the original with them to Turin but a replica remains
on display here.
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