Eleanor of Aquitaine: queen twice over, rebel, crusader, and one of the most extraordinary women who ever lived.
Despite living in an era where women had little power even when born into a mighty inheritance as she was, she cultivated boldness. She was considered indiscreet in both dress and language. In her seventies, Eleanor rode on horseback from Aquitaine to Spain to personally vet a suitor for her granddaughter. Across mountains. In her seventies. On horseback. Legend.
Eleanor had her effigy – a painted stone sculpture over her burial crypt – made larger and higher than the one for her philandering husband Henry that is next to her. It can be visited at Fontevraud Abbey in the Loire Valley where she was entombed between Richard I the Lionheart, her son, and Henry.
The effigy of the Queen is wearing a crown and has an open book in her hands. Some speculate that its a Bible but others think that it is a poetry book. Eleanor was a supporter of the arts and of the troubadours.
Eleanor was born around 1124 and inherited the vast Duchy of Aquitaine as a teenager. At 15, she married King Louis VII of France in Bordeaux — a fabulous city to explore on foot – email us for suggestions – we dont offer walking tours in Bordeaux city but we do offer walking tours in the Bordeaux Bergerac Vineyards. Keep an eye out for the bronze commemorative plate to her wedding on one of the city gates — it’s a hidden gem.
Eleanor had two daughters with Louis, accompanied him on a Crusade to the Holy Land, and while there — according to the gossip — took a lover in the afternoon. On returning from the Crusade, Eleanor decided that her husband, a man who prayed more than he ruled wasn’t what she’d signed up for. She persuaded the Pope to annul their marriage on grounds of consanguinity (distant family connection). Louis was also under pressure to move on as Eleanor hadn’t produced a male heir so it wasn’t completely one sided.
Within just two months of her annulment, Eleanor married Henry Plantagenet, who was several years her junior. He went on to become King Henry II of England — which meant that Aquitaine, her beloved home duchy, came under English rule. As a wealthy single woman in the 12th century, remarrying quickly wasn’t just a romantic choice — it was a matter of survival. Single noblewomen were prime targets for abduction and forced marriage. Eleanor moved fast and married smart.
Eleanor and Henry granted the town of Saint-Émilion its city rights. In return? Fifty barrels of their finest wine per year. The English Rule – 1152 to 1453 – meant that for 300 years Bordeaux had the advantage with trade to England (and onward to England’s trading partners). This near-monopoly gave Bordeaux a head start part of why Bordeaux is still the most famous wine region in the world.
Eleanor is often celebrated for her political cunning and her influence on the arts — she was a passionate patron of the troubadours and courtly poetry. Eleanor outlived eight of her ten children, including her most famous son, Richard the Lionheart. She spent her final years at the Abbey of Fontevraud, where she died in 1204 at around 80 years old — a remarkable age for any era. Her effigy at Fontevraud Abbey is a wonderful last word: it larger and positioned higher than that of her husband Henry.
The effigy shows her wearing a crown and holding an open book — believed by some to be a Bible, by others to be a poetry collection. Either way, it speaks to a woman who valued knowledge and culture. That said, despite being Queen of England for decades, she never bothered to learn English.
On our wine tours and walking tours from Château Feely, you’ll discover the living history of Nouvelle-Aquitaine — the landscape, the wines, and the remarkable stories woven into it.
If you are staying at Chateau Feely and self guiding rather than booking a tour with us – just over an hour’s drive from Chateau Feely, you can visit Richard the Lionheart’s castle at Beynac in the Dordogne. We love pairing this with a stop at Château Milandes — the former home of another iconic woman of this region, the incomparable Josephine Baker.
Two queens of different centuries. One extraordinary corner of France.
🍷 Come and discover Aquitaine’s history — and wines — with us.Email us to book your tour.
Let’s be honest — when someone says ‘vineyard walking tour’, you’re thinking… am I about to suffer?
Not on French Wine Adventures!
🙂
We are delighted to say it is absolutely about fun but you will also get a good stretch of the legs. Food and wine taste so much better after a couple of hours of walking in magnificent vineyard landscapes.
French Wine Adventures walking tours can be adjusted to suit you – we can adjust to guests based on levels of fitness – they are small group tours so customisation is possible. However, they are not suitable for guests that have difficulty walking – for this we also offer classic wine tours with limited walking.
We have categorised the French Wine Adventures walking tours using the system below.
Easy: fine for occasional walkers – for example the Wine Adventure Day or the St Emilion Grand Cru Tour
Moderate: for those who walk on a regular basis – for example the Monbazillac Walking Tour with Michelin Star restaurant lunch or one of the circuits on our Casual Walking Tour in South West France
Moderate plus: for walkers who are comfortable with ascents and descents and slightly uneven terrain – for example several of our Casual Walking Tours in South West France – we have many routes to propose departing from our HQ in Saussignac
We walk through the vines your wine comes from. We get up close to the soil. You hear the insider wine gossip. You understand why a Bordeaux tastes like Bordeaux, St Emilion like a St Emilion or a Saussignac like a Saussignac.
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So on the question of ‘will I suffer?’ Honestly? Sitting in a van being driven from château to château is far more exhausting.
When you walked the vineyards, touch the soil, hear the stories… that glass isn’t just wine anymore.
If this is your kind of holiday — Come walk with us!
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