Also known as Parcs-aux-Cerfs
thumb|Women being led into the Parc-aux-Cerfs in a 19th-century engraving.
thumb|Women being led into the Parc-aux-Cerfs in a 19th-century engraving.
A Parc-aux-Cerfs (; "park of stags"), in France, was generally the name given to the clearings that provided hunting fields for the French aristocracy prior to the French Revolution. The name is most notoriously known in history for an area in the grounds of the Palace of Versailles and a house there owned by Louis XV, where his secret mistresses were accommodated, being taken from there to the palace to visit the king.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).