
Last modified: 2024-12-28 by olivier touzeau
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![[Flag]](../images/f/fr-77-fo.gif) 
Flag of Fontainebleau - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 6 July 2021
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Fontainebleau (15,945 inhabitants in 2021; 17,205 ha) is a commune located 55.5 kilometres south-southeast of the centre of Paris. It is a sub-prefecture of the Seine-et-Marne department, and has the largest land area in the Île-de-France region.
This hamlet was endowed with a royal hunting lodge and a chapel by Louis VII in the middle of the twelfth century. A century later, Louis IX (Saint Louis) had a country house and a hospital constructed there. Philip the Fair was born there in 1268 and died there in 1314. In all, thirty-four sovereigns, from Louis VI the Fat, (1081–1137) to Napoleon III (1808–1873), spent time at Fontainebleau. The connection between the town of Fontainebleau and the French monarchy was reinforced with the transformation of the royal country house into a true royal palace, the Palace of Fontainebleau. This was accomplished by king Francis I (1494–1547), who, in the largest of his many construction projects, reconstructed, expanded, and transformed the royal château at Fontainebleau into a residence that became his favourite, as well as the residence of his mistress, Anne, duchess of Étampes.
From the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, every monarch, from Francis I
  to Louis XV, made important renovations at the Palace of Fontainebleau.
  On 18 October 1685, Louis XIV signed the Edict of Fontainebleau there. Also 
  known as the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, this royal fiat reversed the 
  permission granted to the Huguenots in 1598 to worship publicly in specified 
  locations and hold certain other privileges. 
  The 1762 Treaty of Fontainebleau, a secret agreement between France and 
  Spain concerning the Louisiana territory in North America, was concluded 
  here. Also, preliminary negotiations, held before the 1763 Treaty of Paris
  was signed, ending the Seven Years' War, were at Fontainebleau.
  
  On 29 October 1807, Manuel Godoy, chancellor to the Spanish king, Charles IV
  and Napoleon signed the Treaty of Fontainebleau, which authorized the
  passage of French troops through Spanish territories so that they might
  invade Portugal.
  On 20 June 1812, Pope Pius VII arrived at the château of Fontainebleau,
  after a secret transfer from Savona, accompanied by his personal physician,
  Balthazard Claraz. In poor health, the Pope was the prisoner of Napoleon,
  and he remained in his genteel prison at Fontainebleau for nineteen months.
  From June 1812 until 23 January 1814, the Pope never left his apartments.
  On 20 April 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte, shortly before his first abdication,
  bid farewell to the Old Guard, the renowned grognards (gripers) who had
  served with him since his first campaigns, in the "White Horse Courtyard"
  (la cour du Cheval Blanc) at the Palace of Fontainebleau. The 1814 Treaty of
  Fontainebleau stripped Napoleon of his powers (but not his title as Emperor
  of the French) and sent him into exile on Elba.
  
  Until the 19th century, Fontainebleau was a village and a suburb of Avon.
  Later, it developed as an independent residential city.
  The palace became a national museum in 1927 and was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981.
  In July and August 1946, the town hosted the Franco-Vietnamese Conference,
  intended to find a solution to the long-contested struggle for Vietnam's
  independence from France, but the conference ended in failure.
  Fontainebleau also hosted the general staff of the Allied Forces in Central
  Europe (Allied Forces Center or AFCENT) and the land forces command
  (LANDCENT); the air forces command (AIRCENT) was located nearby at Camp
  Guynemer. These facilities were in place from the inception of NATO until
  France's partial withdrawal from NATO in 1967 when the United States
  returned those bases to French control. NATO moved AFCENT to Brunssum in the
  Netherlands and AIRCENT to Ramstein in West Germany.
  
  The forest of Fontainebleau surrounds the town and several nearby villages.
  It is protected by France's Office National des Forêts, and it is recognised
  as a French national park. It is managed in order that its wild plants and
  trees, such as the rare service tree of Fontainebleau, and its populations
  of birds, mammals, and butterflies, can be conserved. It is a former royal
  hunting park often visited by hikers and horse riders. The forest is also
  well regarded for bouldering and is particularly popular among climbers, as
  it is the biggest developed area of that kind in the world.
Olivier Touzeau, 6 July 2021
The curent flag is white with the coat of arms and the name of the commune below: photo (2011), photo (2018), photo (2020).
The coat of arms of Fontainebleau is blazoned:
  Tierced per fess, 1. Or an imperial eagle Sable, 2. Azure a wavy fess 
  Argent, 3. Argent a salamander enflamed gules; on a canton azure the letter
  N beneath a radiant star or.
  (Cities of the Empire fell into three classes, and napoleonic heraldry
  attributed this canton to Second class cities).
  The second part of the tierce has more often two wavy fesses Argent.
  
  The salamander was Francis I's badge. Fontainebleau was one of Napoleon's
  favorite residences, whence the canton and the eagle. The wavy fess alludes
  to the name of the town and the word "spring".
  Fontainebleau was recorded in the Latinised forms Fons Bleaudi, Fons
  Bliaudi, and Fons Blaadi in the 12th and 13th centuries, as Fontem blahaud
  in 1137, as Fontaine belle eau (folk etymology "fountain of beautiful
  water") in the 16th century, as Fontainebleau and Fontaine belle eau in
  1630, and as the invented, fanciful Latin Fons Bellaqueus in the 17th
  century Contrary to the folk etymology, the name comes from the medieval 
  compound noun of fontaine, meaning spring (fountainhead) and blitwald,
  consisting of the Germanic personal name Blit and the Germanic word for
  forest.
Olivier Touzeau, 6 July 2021
Former variant flags of Fontainebleau
Former flags of Fontainebleau, left, observed in 2016/17, right, in 2012 - Images by Olivier Touzeau, 6 July 2021
A former version of the flag of Fontainebleau observed in 2016 and 2017 had only the coat of arms without lettering: photo (2016), photo (2017).
A previous version observed in 2012 had only the shield of the coat of arms without ornaments: photo (2012), photo (2012).
Olivier Touzeau, 6 July 2021