- Another famous scented preparation that would have enhanced the ambiance was the Pommade de Florence, a popular concoction made of Florentine iris, fashionable with the French ladies and greatly appreciated by the King.
- Spawforth, Tony, “Versailles: A Biography of a Palace”, St. Martin’s Griffin, New York, 2010.
- Mitford, Nancy, “The Sun King: Louis XIV at Versailles”, The New York Review of Books, New York, 1967
- Lablaude, Pierre-André, “La Restauration des Croisées Monumentales de l’Orangerie”, Monumental 2005, Revue Scientifique et Technique des Monuments Historiques, Centre des Monuments Nationaux, Monum, Editions du Patrimoine, Paris, 2005.
- Laszlo, Pierre, “Citrus: A History”, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2008.
- Saudan, Sylvia and Michel, “Orangeries: Palaces of Glass : Their History and Development”, Evergreen, 1994.
– Breton, Guy, “Histoires d’Amour de l’Historie de France”, Tome Quatre, Editions Noir et Blanc, 8 Rue Lincoln, Paris, 1964.
– Genders, Roy, “Perfume through the Ages”, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1972.
– Groom, Nigel, “The New Perfume Handbook”, Chapman & Hall, London, 1997.
– Hyde, Elizabeth, “Cultivated Power: Flowers, Culture, and Politics in the Reign of Louis XIV”, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 2005.
- Baumel, Jean, “Publicité d’un maître apothicaire -parfumeur au XVIIème siècle”. Montpellier en 1668, Editions C.G.C. et la Grande Revue, 37 Rue de Constantinople, Paris, 1974.
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