Pierre I Desgots

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Pierre I Desgots (c.1600 – 1675) was a French gardener who helped to maintain and create French formal gardens at the Tuileries and the Palais-Cardinal in Paris.[1] He was the brother-in-law of the famous French garden designer André Le Nôtre and the grandfather of the landscape architect Claude Desgots.[1]

Pierre I Desgots was born in Paris around 1600. He was the son of Jean I Desgots, a plaster merchant.[1] His older sister Marie Desgots (died 1675[2]) married Martin Bocquet, a gardener at the Cours-la-Reine, a promenade created by Queen Marie de' Medici along the Seine.[3] His older brother Jean II Desgots (died 1624[2]) is recorded in a contract of 2 October 1616 as maître jardinier ('master gardener') and an associate of Jean Le Nôtre, father of André Le Nôtre, at the garden of the Maison Feydeau, Rue des Francs-Bourgeois. From 1618, Jean II Desgots was jardinier du roi ('gardener of the king') at the Tuileries.[4] Pierre I Desgots married Elisabeth (Ysabel) Le Nôtre, sister of André Le Nôtre, on 10 February 1625. The couple had a son, Pierre II Desgots (1630–1688), who also became a gardener and worked closely with André Lenôtre. After the death of Pierre I's wife in 1632,[5] the inventory of her belongings listed garden tools and flowers, but no books. The flowers included anemones, tulips, white and yellow daffodils, jonquils, crocuses, Persian tulips, hepatics, and buttercups, among others.[1] Pierre I and his son resided on the Rue Saint-Vincent (now the Rue Saint-Roch) in the parish of Saint-Roch, Paris.[1] In 1654, Pierre II married Martine Servelle (died 1670), and the couple had a son, Claude Desgots,[2] who became an internationally famous landscape architect.

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