This year marks 150 years since the French writer’s death. Events will be held all year, across France and particularly in the Berry, where she penned many of her most notable works…
Born in Paris on July 1, 1804, Amantine-Lucile-Aurore Dupin, later known as George Sand, became one of the most influential literary voices of the 19th century. Novelist, journalist and women’s rights activist, she produced more than 70 novels alongside plays and essays and gained international fame during the Romantic era.
Although she nurtured a strong association with Parisian literary society, Sand spent a large amount of her time in the rural province of Berry in central France. Raised by her grandmother at her estate in Nohant, in the Indre département, Sand was greatly inspired by the countryside. It was in Berry that she wrote many of her celebrated rustic novels, such as La Mare au Diable, François le Champi and La Petite Fadette, in which she portrayed rural life with empathy and realism while exploring themes of love and social justice.
George Sand died at her beloved home in Nohant on June 8, 1876. She is buried there, in the family cemetery beside the garden she cherished.
A HOME FOR THE ARTS
The young Aurore, as she was known by her family, first discovered the estate at the age of four. It had been acquired by her grandmother, Marie-Aurore Dupin de Francueil, in 1793. Sadly, Aurore’s father died in a horse-riding accident shortly after the family arrived at the property. Mrs Dupin de Francueil decided to raise her herself, and Aurore lived in Nohant until she was 13. She later inherited the estate.
After her divorce, she moved to Nohant permanently. The house became a place of intense literary production both for her and for a renowned cultural salon, welcoming writers, musicians and thinkers who gathered in the quiet. Berry countryside. At Nohant, Sand hosted the likes of Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, Honoré de Balzac, Eugène Delacroix, Théophile Gautier and Gustave Flaubert, alongside her family and local friends..
Today, the estate is managed by the Centre des monuments nationaux; the house and the grounds have remained largely the same as when Sand lived and wrote there and visitors can walk in the writer’s steps, perhaps drawing inspiration from the same pastoral atmosphere she loved so much.
George_Sand_by_Nadar,_1864
SPECIAL EVENTS FOR 2026
This year’s celebrations will weave together performance, music, literature and more across the Berry region and elsewhere in France. Audiences can discover George sans S, a poetic puppet-theatre creation by the company Les Anges au Plafond, while classical and traditional music lovers will be drawn to a newly created concert-reading, George Sand and Music, which is performed by the Paris Mozart Orchestra under the direction of Claire Gibault. Photography takes centre stage with the exhibition I Am in Foreign Worlds by the artist FLORE. Commissioned by the Centre des monuments nationaux, it offers a contemporary visual dialogue with Sand’s legacy.
The inaugural Singulières festival celebrates remarkable women in the land of George Sand, alongside a theatrical adaptation of Histoire de ma vie, produced by the Chopin Festival. Meanwhile, the George Sand Short Film Festival showcases how young filmmakers reinterpret her life and work.
Literary gatherings organised by the Federation of Writers’ Houses will focus on women authors. The programme culminates in the award of the first George Sand Literary Prize, rounding out a vibrant homage to one of France’s most iconic writers.
From France Today Magazine
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