These porcelain ice-pails, with their elephant heads, formed part of a gift made on 5 May 1812 to the Emperor Francis I of Austria (1804-35) from his son-in-law Napoleon I. They were valued at FFr1,000 each.
Each of the buildings, painted by Jean-François Robert (1778-1838), had connections with Napoleon. They are: on one ice-pail, the Château of Saint-Cloud and the Château of Saint-Cyr; on the other, the Château of Ecouen and the Tuileries Palace. Napoleon proclaimed himself First Consul at Saint-Cloud, which became his summer home and was the place where he married Princess Marie-Louise of Austria in 1810. Napoleon himself, with the Empress Marie-Louise, can be seen in the landau carriage in the view of the Château of Saint-Cloud. In 1802 Napoleon established a military school at Saint-Cyr, and in 1807 a girl's school at the Château of Ecouen, while the Tuileries Palace was Napoleon's residence from 1800 until his exile.
The pails originally had metal liners intended to hold ice-cream, surrounded by crushed ice. The elephant heads suggest something of a Rococo fantasy, but the gilt ground and patterns of matt gilded decoration are firmly in the Empire style, reflecting the splendour and luxury of the Napoleonic court.