Casamaures Villa … A Moroccan Architectural Masterpiece Near the French Alps

The Casamaures villa. (AFP)
The Casamaures villa. (AFP)
TT

Casamaures Villa … A Moroccan Architectural Masterpiece Near the French Alps

The Casamaures villa. (AFP)
The Casamaures villa. (AFP)

The Casamaures villa is an oriental masterpiece from the 19th century, inspired by Moroccan architecture, near the city of Grenoble, in southeastern France. Passing through many owners, the villa was eventually saved by Christiane Guichard, who managed to enlist it as a historic landmark and worked for four decades on restoring it.

Guichard faced "a double challenge, to save the villa and revive it with creativity," reported AFP.

The 60-year-old owner, known as "Mrs. Casamaures," noticed that the villa, built in 1855 on the foothills of La Chartreuse Mountains in Saint-Martin-le-Vinoux, "has always beamed with life and made a great gathering place for the public."

The Casamaures stands unique among the other villas in that region near the French Alps. It has a sophisticated design with its oriental architecture consisting of arcades, arabesque, mashrabiyas, and huge windows with colored glass.

Overseeing a roofed 9-meter-long winter garden full of oriental antiquities, a part of its wooden façade was somehow transferred to the Turkish pavilion at the Exposition Universelle of 1855.

The villa also oversees gardens housing exotic plants and solar timepieces.

But how was an oriental palace established in the suburbs of Grenoble? The general context of that era allowed it, according to Béatrice Besse, art historian and novelist who recently wrote the biography of the villa's founder Joseph Jullien, a merchant from Grenoble known as Cochard.

The historian explains that the phase that followed Bonaparte's explorative trip to Egypt "promoted the beauty of this country," and this interest expanded later to include all that is related to the Ottoman Empire.

Grenoble was the most affected by this wave especially since it hosted Egyptologist Jean-François Champollion and Scientist Joseph Fourier. This orientalist influence was also reflected in architecture.

Although mystery surrounds the life of Cochard, he certainly never traveled to the East. All he wanted from the construction of this villa was to impress the bourgeoisie of Grenoble and build "a reputation for himself."



Italy’s Olympic Flag Bearer Tamberi Loses His Wedding Ring in the Seine River

Gianmarco Tamberi waves an Italian flag as the Italian team parades along the Seine river in Paris, France, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 26, 2024 (AP)
Gianmarco Tamberi waves an Italian flag as the Italian team parades along the Seine river in Paris, France, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 26, 2024 (AP)
TT

Italy’s Olympic Flag Bearer Tamberi Loses His Wedding Ring in the Seine River

Gianmarco Tamberi waves an Italian flag as the Italian team parades along the Seine river in Paris, France, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 26, 2024 (AP)
Gianmarco Tamberi waves an Italian flag as the Italian team parades along the Seine river in Paris, France, during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics, Friday, July 26, 2024 (AP)

Drama is never far from the surface when it comes to flamboyant high jumper Gianmarco Tamberi and big events.

This time it involved what went below the surface.

The Italian lost his wedding ring in the Seine River during the rainy opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics.

“I’m sorry my love, I’m really, really sorry,” Tamberi wrote in an open letter of apology he posted on Instagram on Saturday to his wife of two years, Chiara Bontempi.

“Too much water, too many kilograms lost over the last few months and maybe the uncontrollable enthusiasm of what we were doing. Probably all three things,” added Tamberi, who shared flag-bearing duties for Italy with fencer Arianna Errigo during Friday's ceremony, which featured boats parading athletes instead of the usual procession inside a stadium.

Last month, Tamberi pretended to hide springs in his shoes when he won gold at the European Championships then jumped into the arms of Italy President Sergio Mattarella. And when he shared gold with his good friend Mutaz Barshim at the Tokyo Games, Tamberi celebrated wildly, which drew more attention than his performance.

Tamberi, along with Errigo, had the honor of flying to Paris on the presidential plane with Mattarella, which he called “the most emotional flight of my life” — a play on words with his jumping “flights."

Tamberi said he felt the ring sliding off his finger and saw it dropping as Italy cruised down the Seine on a boat with Israel and Jamaica.

“I followed it until I saw it bounce inside the boat,” he said. “But the rebound went in the wrong direction unfortunately. ... But if it had to happen, if I really had to lose this ring, I couldn’t imagine a better place. It will remain forever on the riverbed in the City of Love.”

Tamberi is favored to win another gold when the men’s high jump competition starts Aug. 7.

“Hopefully this is a sign that I’ll come home with an ever bigger gold medal,” he said.

Tamberi invited his wife to throw her ring into the Seine, too.

“Then they’ll be together forever,” Tamber said, “and we’ll have another reason to renew our vows.”