Carved stone, antique fireplaces, and untouched upper floors define this 1771 château — originally a fortified manor — set in one of France’s last under-the-radar regions for historic estates.
All in Historic
Carved stone, antique fireplaces, and untouched upper floors define this 1771 château — originally a fortified manor — set in one of France’s last under-the-radar regions for historic estates.
The Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands director is selling his former Georgian mill house—complete with river islands, rope bridges, and a hidden summerhouse.
A frescoed second-floor apartment in a noble Lucca palazzo makes a strong case for the Tuscan pied-à-terre—with three en-suite bedrooms, two balconies, and views of San Frediano.
Off-market? Maybe. Unreportable? Absolutely not. This 25-foot-wide Upper East Side townhouse is pure architectural drama—with colonial bones and a century of very cool secrets.
While the world watched Bezos and Sánchez light up Venice, a real aristocratic gem quietly resurfaced a few bridges away. This 18th-century palazzo with historically important Rococo interiors is on the market with Lionard.
A historic Provençal manor has been quietly transformed near the Rhône—think soaring volumes, original stone, two pools, and over 11,000 ft² of space in a riverside village 30 minutes from Avignon.
An 18th-century Provençal retreat with terracotta floors, a jasmine-lined pool, and a garden fed by its own spring—restored by a Belgian creative duo and now offered for €995,000.
Neoclassical bones, 716 acres of riverfront land, and a Monticello-level restoration—led by the same high-end contractor behind Thomas Jefferson’s own estate—make this Virginia landmark as rare as it is architecturally exacting.
Tucked inside the gated Cap Bénat estate — a low-profile hideaway on the Côte d’Azur — this cliffside villa has direct beach access and uninterrupted sea views.
Trophy apartments of this scale are increasingly elusive in Paris. In the Latin Quarter, a triplex Left Bank residence with luminous volumes and unobstructed Seine views—right where historic Paris comes alive.