
La Chambre des dames
1983 • Drama
French miniseries based on the novels by Jeanne Bourin.
Why you should read the novels
If you loved the ambiance of the 1983 TV series La Chambre des dames, step into the fuller world of Jeanne Bourin’s novels, The Chamber of Ladies and The Game of Temptation. These historical fiction classics immerse you in medieval Paris under Saint Louis with far richer detail than any screen can hold.
Bourin’s storytelling lingers on craft workshops, guild disputes, faith, food, love, and the rhythms of domestic life—meticulously researched textures that make thirteenth‑century Paris breathe. The novels’ intimate perspectives and thoughtful pacing reward readers who crave depth, nuance, and historically grounded emotion.
Choose the books over the adaptation to experience complete character arcs, layered motivations, and the author’s distinctive voice. For fans of medieval Paris, women’s history, and immersive historical epics, The Chamber of Ladies and The Game of Temptation offer the definitive journey.
Adaptation differences
The TV adaptation necessarily compresses two expansive novels into limited screen time. As a result, timelines are tightened, certain subplots are omitted, and some secondary figures are merged, giving the series a clearer central romance but a narrower social tapestry than the books.
Jeanne Bourin’s prose dwells on artisan techniques, market life, guild customs, liturgical seasons, and household management—world‑building that the novels use to shape character and theme. On screen, this granular historical texture is streamlined into set pieces and dialogue, reducing the sense of everyday medieval routines that drive the original narrative.
Tone also shifts. The novels balance courtly love with a distinctly medieval spirituality and moral reflection; the series emphasizes momentum and visual pageantry, softening the didactic, devotional, and scholarly digressions that characterize Bourin’s authorial voice.
Finally, because the adaptation blends material from The Chamber of Ladies and The Game of Temptation, the order and emphasis of certain events differ. Some character developments arrive earlier or resolve faster, and a few storylines are simplified to serve episodic structure, while the books trace multi‑year arcs with greater psychological and generational continuity.
La Chambre des dames inspired from
The Game of Temptation
by Jeanne Bourin
The Chamber of Ladies
by Jeanne Bourin










