The chateau of Versailles will reopen the private rooms of Queen Marie-Antoinette as part of its ongoing 400th anniversary celebrations. The restored apartments will reopen to the public on June 27, featuring 100 sq m of luxurious living space where France's last queen played with her children and received friends. It is the final part of a restoration of the Queen's Hamlet and Trianon, a series of cottages and getaways built away from the main palace.

It gives a "new understanding of history, with this paradox between public and private life, etiquette and intimacy, an extraordinary summary of history within a few square meters," said Catherine Pegard, who runs the palace. The palace, which welcomed nearly seven million visitors last year, dates to late 1623 when King Louis XIII ordered the expansion of a small hunting lodge on the 800-hectare site.

This picture shows the bedroom of Queen Marie-Antoinette de Habsbourg-Lorraine, wife of France's King Louis XVI, in the Chateau de Versailles.
This picture shows the bedroom of Queen Marie-Antoinette de Habsbourg-Lorraine, wife of France's King Louis XVI, in the Chateau de Versailles.
A bust of Queen Marie-Antoinette in her bedroom.
A bust of Queen Marie-Antoinette in her bedroom.
Furniture in a salon, part of the private apartments of Queen Marie-Antoinette.
Furniture in a salon, part of the private apartments of Queen Marie-Antoinette.

"This anniversary is primarily aimed at expressing the continuity of history at Versailles for these past 400 years and to show that we will continue to open and restore (parts of the palace) and bring them to life," said Pegard. Marie-Antoinette's apartments include a boudoir, library and billiard room. She accessed the refuge through a secret door hidden in her official bedroom.

A sitting area in the salon.
A sitting area in the salon.
Detail of a curtain in the salon.
Detail of a curtain in the salon.
This picture shows a library, part of the private apartments of Queen Marie-Antoinette.
This picture shows a library, part of the private apartments of Queen Marie-Antoinette.

The palace is also preparing a new gallery dedicated to its history, to open in September. "At Versailles, the work never ends," said Pegard, who has overseen a wide array of restorations since taking over in 2011. These have included the Buffet d'eau Fountain, the apartments of Louis XV's son, the Dauphin Louis-Ferdinand, as well as those of his favorite mistress, Jeanne du Barry – who is the center of a new film starring Johnny Depp as the monarch, that was filmed at the palace. - AFP