Shortly before her marriage to the Italian Prince Camillo Borghese Pauline Bonaparte bought the Paris residence of the Dukes of Charost. She decorated each room in a different colour.
Pauline added two wings overlooking the garden. One contained 175 paintings from her husband’s art collection and the other was a dining room which could be converted to a ball room.
The glass ceilings were draped with fine fabric to allow the light to penetrate.
Pauline owned the residence for 11 years.
When Napoleon was forced to abdicate and exiled to Elba, Pauline headed there to be with him. She sold her Paris residence to the Duke of Wellington who was acting on behalf of the British government.
The residence sold for 800,000 francs which included 300,000 francs for the furniture. It was the first permanent residence purchased for a British Ambassador.
Wellington occupied the house until Napoleon returned to Paris. When Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo, the British returned. It is still the residence of the British Ambassador to France.
Pauline’s original bed has been moved from the first floor to the ground floor. The English King Edward VII slept in it twice on visits to Paris as did the Queen Mother in 1956 and 1982.