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Stop 3 of 15

Fürstenhaus Herrenhausen

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Fürstenhaus Herrenhausen

Straight ahead, you’ll spot a beautifully restored yellow mansion with a striking red tiled roof, large white windows, and a neat central entrance-just look beyond the iron gate and you can’t miss it shining through the trees.

Now, as you stand in front of this grand building, let me take you on a journey that’s far fancier than the average Tuesday-and swoops through centuries of royal drama, art, and a dash of Hanoverian house-repair headaches. The Princely House Herrenhausen started its story in 1721, when King George I of Great Britain-who was also the Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg (talk about a job title)-commissioned this palace as a lavish gift for his daughter, Louise von Delitz. She was, by the way, one of his three daughters with his rather well-connected mistress, Melusine Countess of Schulenburg. So, you could say this place was both a royal residence and a very extravagant “thinking of you” card.

The house changed hands faster than a hot potato at a royal banquet. For decades, local noble families called these walls home, and by around 1770, the nine-bay house got spruced up with a grand central section and lower side wings-kind of like getting a snazzy new haircut on top of a classic suit. They say even the courtyard outside was pampered with symmetrical baroque gardens. Imagine the sound of 18th-century silk shoes gliding over the gravel... if you’re very quiet, you might almost-oh never mind, let’s not get carried away.

Come 1836, the palace returned to royal hands for use as a guest house-only the poshest visitors need apply, of course. But just before the Kingdom of Hanover fizzled out, a star architect, Georg Heinrich Schuster, gave the house its current elegant look: that bright yellow stucco and the elegant wooden trim over the windows and doors. Don’t miss the ceiling inside the entrance hall with its painting from 1721-the goddess Juno wafting along on a cloud, peacock by her side, smiling down at cherubic little putti. Not that you can just waltz in these days, but believe me, that painting is a party for your eyeballs.

Art lovers would have swooned at the priceless treasures inside: Baroque furniture, delicate porcelain, oil portraits of lords and ladies with their best “don’t-smile-for-the-portrait” faces, and even a carved children’s playroom set from the 1600s. Paintings traveled here from all over the family’s other palaces-Herrenhausen, Blankenburg, and Marienburg-each bringing tales of hunting, landscapes, and the ever-fashionable court lives. Top billing goes to the Heartberg Hunting Tapestry, a mammoth painting showing the four Heartberg brothers, who stared down from the wall as if to say, “Don’t touch my tankard!”

Here’s a twist: while most nearby palaces were battered in World War II, the Princely House survived. It became a museum in 1955, welcoming crowds until 2011. Since then, it’s been more “home, sweet home” for modern royalty-Prince Ernst August and family-though their carpet-laying plans hit a snag because the 1980s renovations used toxic chemicals. Who knew royal life involved so much home improvement?

So as you admire this golden gem, take a moment to picture centuries of aristocrats making plans, sharing secrets, or perhaps just arguing about who borrowed the best porcelain teacup. Welcome to the ever-evolving tale of the Princely House Herrenhausen.

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