Auvers-sur-Oise
The Nissim-de-Camondo Museum, such as the Jacquemart Museum, The Wallace Collection, the Frick Collection, or the Museo Poldi Pezzoli, was originally a mansion, now a museum.
Opened in 1936 in homage to Nissim de Camondo, who died for France in the first war, the house was built by René Sergent between 1911 and 1914, inspired by the little Trianon of Versailles,
The Nissim-de-Camondo Museum houses an exceptional collection of 18th-century furniture and art, preserved in the state where it was inhabited by the Camondo family, one of the greatest fortunes of the Ottoman Empire, nicknamed the Rothschilds of the Orient, who was coming to Paris at the end of the second Empire (Napoleon III).
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