Origins & Etymology: A Name Over a Thousand Years Old
ジヴェルニーという名前は中世ノルマンディーの波乱に満ちた歴史に深く根ざしています。言語学者の多くは「ジヴェルニー」が古ノルド語のGivernieまたはGiveraniの変形であると認識しており、おそらくスカンジナビア系の人名(ヴァイキングの首長Givarrなど)に、集落を示すノルマン地名の接尾辞-iが付いたものと考えられています。
セーヌ川とエプト川の合流点に位置し、ノルマンディーとイル=ド=フランスの歴史的境界線上にあるジヴェルニーは、常に戦略的な位置を占めてきました。911年のサン=クレール=シュル=エプト条約によりこの地はロロン率いるヴァイキングに割譲され、それがノルマンディー公国の礎となりました。
Medieval Giverny: Mill, Vines & Market (11th–18th c.)
During the Middle Ages, Giverny organised itself around three economic pillars: cereal and vegetable cultivation in the fertile Epte valley soils, viticulture on sun-facing slopes — surprising today, but common throughout Normandy until the 18th century — and the operation of a water mill on the stream, which supplied flour to surrounding villages.
The village was administered as part of the lordship of Gasny, itself within the Norman Vexin county. The parish church — the present Église Sainte-Radegonde, whose construction dates to the 12th century — formed the centre of community life. Saint Radegonde, a 6th-century Frankish queen turned nun, was a particularly venerated patron in this borderland region between competing kingdoms.
The Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) was not without consequences for the village. The Vernon region, bitterly contested by English and French forces, suffered repeated destruction and exactions. Giverny, too modest to represent a direct strategic objective, was nonetheless affected by plague, requisitions and the general insecurity of that century of conflict. The population, estimated at a few hundred in the early 14th century, fell by a third under the combined effects of war and epidemic.
The Renaissance and the 16th–17th centuries brought a relative return to prosperity. The development of the Seine river axis, linking Paris to the port of Rouen and the sea, benefited riverside villages like Giverny. By the 18th century, cider and calvados production had largely supplanted viticulture, reflecting changes in climate and taste — and establishing the apple orchard as the dominant feature of the Norman landscape that Monet would later paint obsessively.
Monet Arrives (1883): A Train, a Light, a Revolution
1883年の春、クロード・モネは42歳でした。ヴェルノンとガニーの間の列車の旅の中で、窓から見た満開のリンゴの木に囲まれたピンク色の屋根の農家とシダレヤナギが茂る小川の光景に、彼は一瞬で魅了されました。その場所がジヴェルニーでした。
これは即座かつ決定的な一目惚れでした。モネは次の駅で降り、徒歩で戻り、数週間以内にマゾン・デュ・プレッソワールの賃貸契約を結びました。1883年5月、アリス・オシュデとその8人の子供たちとともにこの地に移り住みました。
The American Artists' Colony (1885–1920): Giverny as Transatlantic Art Capital
Less well known is that Giverny was not simply Monet's village. From the late 1880s, the master's presence drew a genuine colony of artists — principally Americans — who transformed this small Norman hamlet into one of the most effervescent artistic laboratories of the late 19th century.
The first American to settle in Giverny was Theodore Robinson, in 1887. A talented painter trained in Paris, he was introduced to Monet by mutual friends and became one of the few artists with whom the master maintained a genuine friendship. Robinson kept a detailed journal of his conversations with Monet — a valuable source for art historians — and developed a distinctly American approach to Impressionism, less systematic than Monet's and more attached to the human figure.
From 1890 the influx accelerated. The Hôtel Baudy, run by Angélina and Gaston Baudy, became the colony's headquarters. What had been a grocer's shop and café gradually transformed into an inn with bedrooms, a restaurant, a painting studio and even a tennis court. The Hôtel Baudy's guest book — still consultable at the restaurant which occupies the same premises today — bears the signatures of Willard Metcalf, Frederick MacMonnies, Louis Ritter, John Leslie Breck and dozens of others.
The relationship between the American artists and Monet was ambivalent. The master, protective of his solitude, generally refused to watch others work and disliked being solicited. But he was conscious that their presence enhanced the village's reputation internationally. It was Frederick Carl Frieseke who perhaps best summarised what Giverny meant to American painters: "It is because I find here more sunshine than in any other corner of France, and because Monet has taught me to see."
World War I sounded the death knell of the colony. Many artists returned to the United States from 1914; the last departed Giverny in the 1920s, carrying with them an artistic movement — American Impressionism — whose works are today displayed in the greatest museums of the country.
The Belle Époque & the Great Decorations (1893–1926)
In 1890, Monet purchased the property outright. He now had the resources — his canvases were selling well, particularly in the United States — to realise the project that had haunted him for years: creating a water garden. In 1893, he acquired a marshy plot across the road and obtained permission to divert a branch of the Epte river to feed a pond. The inhabitants of Giverny initially objected, fearing his "exotic plants" would contaminate the water their livestock drank. Monet reassured them, negotiated, and finally persuaded the municipality.
The water garden was laid out between 1893 and 1901, then expanded. The Japanese bridge — inspired by the ukiyo-e woodblock prints Monet collected passionately — was built by 1895. The wisteria that drapes it in purple cascades each May was planted in 1901. It was in this garden that Monet found the subject that would occupy the last thirty years of his life: the water lilies.
Between 1896 and his death in 1926, he painted the water lilies in over 250 variations, exploring changes of light from morning to twilight, from summer to autumn, in sunshine and in mist. The project culminated in the immense canvases of the Grandes Décorations — the Orangerie panels, designed by Monet himself as a single encompassing work and offered to France in 1918 as an expression of joy at the end of the war. These 22 panels, totalling 91 metres in length, are considered today among the greatest works in the history of Western art.
Monet worked on these canvases despite the cataracts that began affecting his vision from 1912 and which, by the end of his life, caused him to perceive colours in an altered way. He refused surgery for years out of fear of losing his sight entirely, then relented in 1923. The result was imperfect but sufficient to allow him to complete the Grandes Décorations before his death on 5 December 1926, at the age of 86.
Wars & Decline (1914–1966): The Garden's Dark Years
World War I struck the region hard. The American artists departed. The garden's workforce was mobilised. Monet, now alone and ageing, threw himself into his Water Lilies with almost desperate intensity, as though painting were the only possible answer to the catastrophe consuming Europe. His eldest son Jean died in 1914, shortly after hostilities began. His wife Alice had died in 1911. Monet was more alone than ever.
At his death in 1926, the property passed to his son Michel Monet, who possessed neither the inclination nor the means to maintain the gardens. Michel lived modestly and was more interested in hunting in Africa than in horticulture. The gardens were maintained minimally by the remaining gardeners but, without the creative vision of their founder, declined slowly.
World War II worsened matters. The German Occupation took hold of Normandy from June 1940. The Vernon area was a strategic node: the Allies bombed the Seine bridges to impede the German retreat in August 1944. Monet's house miraculously escaped destruction — local tradition holds that a cultured German officer had forbidden any requisitioning of the property. But the gardens were practically abandoned during these years.
Michel Monet died in a car accident in 1966, bequeathing the entire property to the Académie des Beaux-Arts, which inherited a house in poor repair and gardens that had almost entirely returned to wilderness. For a decade, the institution hesitated, lacking sufficient funds to restore this exceptional heritage.
The Grand Restoration (1976–1980): The Rebirth of a Masterpiece
The turning point came in 1976 with the appointment of Gérald van der Kemp to lead the restoration project. Van der Kemp was an exceptional figure: it was he who, after World War II, had supervised the restoration of the Palace of Versailles, an enterprise deemed impossible for lack of funding. He applied the same method to Giverny: raising private funds, particularly American, to supplement insufficient public subsidies.
The strategy was brilliant: by drawing on the historical link between Giverny and the American artists — that colony of 1880–1920 — van der Kemp convinced wealthy American donors that restoring Monet's garden was also restoring a chapter of American artistic history. The Versailles Foundation organised galas, auctions and a transatlantic fundraising campaign. Millions of dollars flowed in.
The restoration work was titanic. Both gardens had to be entirely reconceived from Monet-era plans and photographs, seed catalogues and the testimonies of surviving former gardeners. Gilbert Vahé, head gardener, coordinated a team of seven permanent gardeners over four years to faithfully recreate the garden as Monet had intended it. The water lilies for the pond were replanted from cuttings provided by the Latour-Marliac botanical nursery in the Aquitaine, the same nursery that had supplied Monet's original plants a century earlier.
The gardens reopened to the public on 1 June 1980. The reopening was a world event. Within a few years, Giverny transformed from a peaceful Norman village of 500 souls into one of the most visited tourist destinations in France, welcoming 300,000 visitors annually.
Giverny Today: World Heritage & Living Village
Today, Giverny is a beguiling paradox: a village of 900 inhabitants welcoming 300,000 visitors annually, which must navigate gracefully between its status as a world-class tourist destination and its identity as a living Norman rural community.
The Fondation Claude Monet, which has managed the property since 1980, maintains the gardens with seven permanent gardeners, faithful to Monet's vision. Two new greenhouses have been constructed for plant production and bulb storage. Each autumn, a team of divers inspects and cleans the water lily pond. The annual maintenance cost exceeds one million euros, entirely covered by ticket revenues and donations.
The village itself has retained its character. The Rue Claude Monet, which runs alongside the gardens, houses art galleries, craft shops and several restaurants. The Musée des Impressionnismes, founded in 2009 on the site of the former Musée d'Art Américain, offers high-quality temporary exhibitions on Impressionism in all its international variations.
Giverny is, at its heart, a place where history is read through flowers: the same irises that Monet painted in 1900 still bloom in May, the same water lilies float on the same pond, and the same soft, changeable Norman light bathes each morning the visitors who crowd the Japanese bridge. A thousand years of Normandy, forty-three years of genius and a century of collective memory: that is Giverny.
FAQ
Giverny's history stretches back over a thousand years. The village is first documented in records dating to the 11th century under the name 'Givernia', though archaeologists believe the site was inhabited continuously since the Gallo-Roman period. The name itself derives from Old Norse, a legacy of the Viking settlement of Normandy in the early 10th century.
Monet spotted Giverny from the window of a train in the spring of 1883. He was immediately struck by the particular quality of light in the Epte valley — the soft, pearly Norman light filtered through apple orchards and river mist — which he had been pursuing as a painter for decades. He rented the Maison du Pressoir (later renamed the Pink House) the same year and bought it outright in 1890 with proceeds from the sale of his Haystacks series.
After Monet's death in 1926, the gardens fell into gradual decline during the decades that followed. The decisive restoration began in 1976 under the direction of Gérald van der Kemp, the curator who had previously overseen the restoration of the Palace of Versailles. Working with head gardener Gilbert Vahé, van der Kemp raised millions from American donors (channelled through the American Friends of Giverny, later the Versailles Foundation) and completely rehabilitated both gardens. They reopened to the public in 1980.
Yes — and one of the most significant in history. From the mid-1880s to the early 1920s, Giverny attracted hundreds of artists, the majority of them Americans. Painters including Theodore Robinson, John Singer Sargent (occasionally), Willard Metcalf, Frederick Carl Frieseke and Mary Cassatt all spent time in the village, drawn first by Monet's presence and later by the village's own exceptional light. At its peak, the Hotel Baudy housed an international community of artists who transformed Giverny into a transatlantic art laboratory.
Giverny was caught between German occupation and Allied liberation in 1944. The area surrounding Vernon, 5 km away, was heavily bombed during the Normandy Campaign. Monet's house and gardens survived largely intact — in part because the German command, aware of the site's cultural significance, did not commandeer it. However the gardens were severely neglected during the Occupation years, and Monet's son Michel, who inherited the estate, made little effort at upkeep until his death in a car accident in 1966, after which the property passed to the Académie des Beaux-Arts.
Yes. Claude Monet is buried in the churchyard of the Église Sainte-Radegonde, the village church of Giverny, together with his son Michel and several other family members. The grave is a simple stone slab adorned with fresh flowers, tended by the Fondation Claude Monet. The church itself contains medieval stonework and a beautiful view over the valley. Entry is free and it is a short walk from the garden.