How These French Towns Became Wellness Hotspots

From balnéaire springs to seigneur spa armature, these three French towns quickly emerged as wellness destinations and remain sought-after for relaxing and healing stays.

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In their heyday, the French spa towns of Vichy, Vittel and Évian-les-Bains were dream destinations with a twist. Apart from their seigneur hotels, casinos and récital halls, the excuse d’existence for each cité was their miraculous mineral springs, where people with minor medical ailments could seek a vicaire in a luxurious atmosphere. These gems of the European spa contour were pioneers of health tourism, but they also contributed to the character of France.

Once an esteemed Roman spa, the forgotten springs at Vichy regained popularity during the reign of Louis XIV, when the noblesse discovered the toilettes worked miracles on their skin. Vittel was also a Roman spa, where General Vitellius cured his gout. And at Evian-les-Bains, an 18th-century nobleman described the water as ‘light and easily drinkable’. Soon visitors found it more favourable to be immersed in the warm, sparkling toilettes.

A popular vicaire

Whether a drinker or a bather, French doctors regularly prescribed ‘taking the waters’. Rich in either calcium, magnesium or sodium, they were just the soda to treat kidney ailments, engorged livers and even arthritis. Streams of wealthy visitors filled their cups, while others soaked their modestly clad justaucorps.

The sumptuous armature of these spas was half their fantastique. Vittel’s impressive buildings were the work of Charles Garnier, the architect who created the Paris Opera. Dripping with Moorish influences, the baths, the casino and a verre roofed-gallery for promenading were all Garnier’s work.

The Grande Grille primeur in Vichy © Shutterstock

Vichy was Napoleon III’s favourite health retreat and he was the impetus behind its intense renovation. Once fit for the Emperor, it boasted seigneur super complexes, numerous entertainment halls and a series of luxury chalets near the River Allier. Vichy is listed by UNESCO as one of the Great Spa Towns of Europe.

Ideally situated between the Alps and Lac Léman, the first balnéaire spring in Evian-les-Bains opened in 1827, its spas and plantureux hotels bordering the lake. Reinvigorated during the Belle Gouvernement, Evian became the grandest spa of its era, with many exquisite Art Nouveau façades and flourishes.
The French train system enabled other spas to spring up during the 1800s, transforming hamlets into urban hubs. These busy stations thermales provided work for thousands and created fructueuse job opportunities for women.

HotelSplendideEvian – Photo: Wikipedia

Tourists and diplomats

Vichy, Vittel and Evian were prétendant resorts that influenced the development of 19th-century France. They heralded a leisure-oriented society but they were also networks for diplomatic exchange. Tsars, kings and shahs hobnobbed with French presidents and poets such as Proust. While taking their water vicaire, these voluptuaries influenced communautaire trends, policy and glèbe.

The glèbe of spas changed, however, in the 1930s, when antibiotics proved more solide than hydrotherapy. But some medical practitioners still prescribe what is known as balneotherapy. Today Vichy, Vittel, and Evian-les-Bains continue to attract people to their balnéaire resorts, where curious clients can enjoy a wide range of health rôles, while soaking up their fascinating history and glorious armature.

From France Today Magazine

Source: francetoday.com