With their Greco-Roman themes and incomparable beauty, the gardens at Versailles were built to illustrate the immense power of the king. (Rick Steves’ Europe)

With their Greco-Roman themes and incomparable beauty, the gardens at Versailles were built to illustrate the immense power of the king. (Rick Steves’ Europe)

Europe’s crazy rich royals and their lavish retreats

The palaces provide insight into the often-nutty monarchs who once ruled Europe.

Just like today, the royal families of the past were fond of their countryside getaways. These lavish retreats provided an escape from the city and the summer heat, a place for diversions like hunting and horseback riding, and enough land to build grand showpiece palaces and gardens. While Europe has many royal retreats, a few are remarkable for their sheer size, over-the-top opulence and the larger-than-life personalities who built them.

The granddaddy of European palaces is Versailles — King Louis XIV’s 17th-century escape from Paris. Louis was the embodiment of the notion that some people were born to be rulers — and everyone else just needed to follow the rules. As a “divine monarch,” he had to impress upon his people that God had really ordained him to rule without question. And in order to do that, he needed an ultra-fancy house.

Louis spent freely from the public treasury to turn his dad’s hunting lodge into a palace fit for the gods (among whom he counted himself). The main palace boasts rooms lavishly decorated with painted ceilings, heavily ornamented furniture and impressive art (even the Mona Lisa once hung here). Most striking is the Hall of Mirrors, lined with 17 arched mirrors. Back then, mirrors were a great luxury, and the number and size of these were astounding.

Louis also built the ultimate garden — elaborately planned, pruned and decorated, showing everyone that he could control nature like a god. The 1,500 fountains were a marvel of art and engineering. And they were symbolic. The Apollo Fountain shows the “Sun King” in his chariot as he starts his journey across the sky, with his entourage of dolphins leading the way.

For 100 years, Versailles was the ultimate palace in Europe — sparking the construction of many wannabes. In Russia, the Romanovs’ answer to Versailles was the Catherine Palace, just outside of St. Petersburg.

In 1717, Czar Peter the Great and his wife, Catherine I, started construction on a modest two-story abode. When their daughter, Czarina Elizabeth, took over, she hired a famous Italian architect to rebuild the palace in grand Elizabethan Baroque style.

A textbook example of this style is the 9,000-square-foot Great Hall, boasting 300 mirrors (inspired by Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors) and lit by up to 7,000 candles. Even more magnificent is the Amber Room. This jewel box of a room is slathered with six tons of amber mosaic — originally a gift from King Frederick William I of Prussia to his ally Peter the Great — which Elizabeth moved to the palace and expanded.

Later, Czarina Catherine the Great left her own mark on the palace in the restrained neoclassical style. With the help of Scottish architect Charles Cameron, she built the two-story Cameron Gallery, designed to give her a bird’s-eye view over the gardens. When the czarina became too portly to climb the gallery stairs, Cameron installed a long ramp for her to ascend.

More than a century later, Bavaria’s “Mad” King Ludwig also needed a countryside escape. Rather than deal with politics in Munich, Ludwig preferred spending time at his family’s hunting palace, Hohenschwangau. While living there, he dedicated himself — like a kid building a tree house — to the construction of his dream castle on a neighboring hill.

Built from 1869 to 1886, Neuschwanstein Castle was the epitome of 19th-century Romanticism. The castle is wallpapered with misty medieval themes, many from the operas of Ludwig’s friend, Richard Wagner. The extravagant throne room, with an exquisite mosaic floor depicting a visual encyclopedia of animals and plants, was modeled in a Neo-Byzantine style to emphasize his royal status. And he slept in an elaborately carved canopy bed with a forest of Gothic church spires on top. Unfortunately, that only lasted 172 days. Soon after he moved in, a panel of doctors declared him insane, he lost his throne and was found dead in a lake.

Just before Ludwig built the castle of his dreams, his distant cousin, King Ferdinand II of Portugal, built a romantic hilltop palace of his own in Sintra, outside Lisbon.

The Pena Palace is architecturally interesting thanks to its mix of German Romanticism and Portuguese styles. Flamboyant Ferdinand converted a 16th-century Manueline monastery into a 19th-century palace. The result is a crazy, colorful, Neo-fortified casserole of Gothic towers, Renaissance domes, Moorish minarets, Manueline carvings and Disneyland playfulness. The palace was occupied by royals until 1910, when they were ousted in a popular revolt. The elegantly cluttered rooms are still arranged as they were back then, giving this place an intimacy rarely seen in palaces.

Today these homes of crazy rich royals are open to the masses — and massive crowds can be overwhelming, so always reserve ahead.

From the over-the-top Versailles to the intimate Pena Palace, the best royal retreats provide insight into the dynamic, often quirky monarchs who once ruled Europe.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Radiant Red Maples

Now that autumn has blessed us with its presence, the vibrant colors… Continue reading

Queensryche, Haley Reinhart, Bert Kreischer and more

Music and arts coming to Snohomish County

People get a tour of a new side channel built in Osprey Park on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025 in Sultan, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Snohomish PUD cuts ribbon on new Sultan River side channel

The channel created 1,900 linear feet of stream habitat, aimed to provide juvenile salmon with habitat to rest and grow.

Artwork is found throughout La Conner, including along its channel boardwalk. (Jon Bauer / The Herald)
Fall for La Conner: fewer crowds, full charm

A local shares why autumn is the best-kept secret in this artsy waterfront town.

Willy the worm sits between pink and Kramer’s Rote heather. (Sunnyside Nursery)
Are you going Scottish or Irish?

As you read the title above, I am curious what comes to… Continue reading

A truck passes by the shoe tree along Machias Road on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Murder on Machias Road? Not quite.

The Shoe Tree may look rough, but this oddball icon still has plenty of sole.

The 140 seat Merc Playhouse, once home of the Twisp Mercantile, hosts theater, music, lectures and other productions throughout the year in Twisp. (Sue Misao)
Twisp with a twist: Road-tripping to the Methow Valley

Welcome to Twisp, the mountain town that puts “fun, funky and friendly” on the map.

Sally Mullanix reads "Long Island" by Colm Tobin during Silent Book Club Everett gathering at Brooklyn Bros on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
A different happy hour: pizza, books and introverts

A different happy hour: pizza, books and introverts

View of Liberty Bell Mountain from Washington Pass overlook where the North Cascades Highway descends into the Methow Valley. (Sue Misao)
Take the North Cascades Scenic Highway and do the Cascade Loop

This two-day road trip offers mountain, valley and orchard views of Western and Eastern Washington.

Inside El Sid, where the cocktail bar will also serve as a coffee house during the day on Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
New upscale bar El Sid opens in APEX complex

Upscale bar is latest venue to open in APEX Everett.

Counting Crows come to Chateau Ste. Michelle on August 17. (Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.com)
Counting Crows, Beach Boys, Chicago

Send calendar submissions for print and online to features@heraldnet.com. To ensure your… Continue reading

Annzolee Olsen with her chair, from Houseboat, and card table from a Robert Redford movie on Wednesday, July 23, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Hollywood’s hottest giveaway is at The Herald on Thursday

From TV hunks to silver screen queens, snag your favorites for free at the pop-up.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.