Palace and Park of Versailles
Eiffel, Louver and
The
The
A hunting lodge in to a palace
Louis XIV’s third building campaign resulted in the construction of the Hall of Mirrors.
When the chateau (chateau is a French castle or country house belonging to royals or aristocrats) was built
King Louis XIV the Sun King (1643 – 1715)
Louis Dieudonne XIV known as The Grand Monarch, Sun King Etc, born in
The Queen’s bedchamber.
The French Government moved to
Nicholas Fouquet and Vaux le Vicomte
Fouquet was finance minister to the crown and was caught in a crime of embezzling public money and building a chateau by name Vaux le Vicomte. King Louis was not amused and sent Fouquet to prison. But impressed by the style of that chateau the king invited the artists behind the work and entrusted them to the construction of
The following are the three artists who made
Louis Le Vau (1612 – 1670), born in
Vicomte; was commissioned to renovate and extend the old hunting lodge in to a grand palace; Le Vau was also associated with the works of
Le Notre (1613 – 1700), he belonged to a family of gardeners; Notre was responsible with the designing of numerous famous gardens like St James Park,
Charles Le Brun (1619 – 1690) was the greatest painter of that time and his works decorate the palace of Versailles as its richest possessions; ‘Halls of War and Peace’ (Salon de la Guerreand de la Paix), ‘Ambassador’s Stair-case’, ‘Great Hall of Mirrors’ (Galarie de Glaces) etc are salons of Versailles enriched by his works.
During the French Revolution in 1789 much damage was done to the Palace as mobs looted and destroyed the rare artifacts of the palace. When Napoleon Bonaparte came to power he chose this palace as his residence and a massive renovation was undertaken to repair the damage happened associated with the protracted revolution.
The main sights of the Museum
The Marble Court was the last work of Le Vau after; this building was paved with marble during the second campaign of construction and was named after the marble that was paved. Its design was done in a style known as the ‘envelop design’ as the new building enveloped the old chateau without dismantling it. Its western side is richly decorated with bas reliefs and medallions. The southern side is place for Greek Gods and in the south is the Grotte de Thettis and the reservoirs.
Tuileries (The
Galerie de Glaces was designed by Jules Mansart; built in great pomp baroque style; 73 meters long and 10.5 meters wide; it was here Louis XIV used to meet important guests. 17 big arched widows made with alternatively the head of Apollo and lion of
Salon Hercules; got its name from the painting done on its ceiling by Lemoyne (picturing Hercules Entering the Kingdom of Gods; which took full three years for the artist to complete); Salon de Hercules was the swansong of Lemoyne as shortly after completing the work he committed suicide.
The Grand Apartment du roi consists of The Great Hall of Mirrors (Galerie de Galces), Salon de Hercules and the royal bedrooms that were made in the name of the seven planets known at that time; all decorated by Le Brun.
Salon de L’ Abondance The royal hall for buffets; of the three one served liquors and other two only usual foods; worked during days when the king (Louis XIV) held court.
Salon de Diane (representing Goddess of hunt –Diana; planet Moon),
Salon de Mars (God of war; planet Mars),
Salon de Mercure (Roman God of Trade planet Mercury),
Salon de Apollon (Roman God of Arts; planet Sun; it was meant to be king’s bedroom; later came to be used as the throne room),
Salon de Jupiter (Roman God of law and order; represents planet Jupiter)
Salone de Saturne (Roman God of Agriculture; planet Saturn),
Salone de Venus (Roman Goddess of Love; planet Venus) all are apartments made one each for the planets known at that time.
Salone de la Guerre (hall of war) was dedicated Bellona the Roman Goddess for war; exquisite display of armory, like shields, thunderbolts, war-trophies, the gilded ceiling frieze (broad horizontal band of sculpted decoration) with war ornamentation.
Salon de la Paix was made between 1680 and 86 as a counterpart to Salon de la Guerra at the other end of the hall of mirrors,
Napoleon’s Bedroom in pomp this room matches the majesty of the emperor; during the French Revolution all the invaluable furniture arranged in this hall was auctioned off; Napoleon and his wife Marie Louise lived here.
A statement of royal might!
The Salon d’Apollon was originally designed to serve as the king’s bed chamber
The Versailles Palace was built to express statement of strength and majesty of France and its absolute ruler King Louis XIV; it was the virtual ‘power house’ of France when the king, his ministers and court all got concentrated in this magnificent palace.
King Louis never hesitated to flaunt his royal style and affluence and it was displayed before the dignitaries who visited his country. At his time
Still busy
Lit de parade, Salon of Mercury.
Louis Phillippe converted the palace in to a
The peace treaty that was signed putting an end to First World War in
The USP of Versailles is the opulence of life style of its Sun King that is flaunted lavishly; visitors watch them with awe; the royal bedrooms, garden, royal buffet and every thing that are royal!






2 users commented in " Palace of Versailles "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackI live right next to Fontainebleau and prefer it to the Palace of Versailles. Revolution tore Versailles up too much. Just a sad shell these days.
would appreciate it if u knew how to spell le Louvre.
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