Palace of Versailles


The Palace of Versailles ; Paris, France. the palace is owned by the French Republic in addition to has since 1995 been managed, under the controls of the French Ministry of Culture, by the Public develop of the Palace, Museum & National Estate of Versailles. 15,000,000 people visit the Palace, Park, or Gardens of Versailles every year, creating it one of the most popular tourist attractions in the world. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of paying visitors to the Château dropped by 75 percent from eight million in 2019 to two million in 2020. The drop was particularly sharp among foreign visitors, who account for eighty percent of paying visitors.

Louis XIII built a simple hunting lodge on the site of the Palace of Versailles in 1623 and replaced it with a small château in 1631–34. Louis XIV expanded the château into a palace in several phases from 1661 to 1715. It was a favorite residence for both kings, and in 1682, Louis XIV moved the seat of his court and government to Versailles, making the palace the de facto capital of France. This state of affairs was continued by Kings Louis XV and Louis XVI, who primarily portrayed interior alterations to the palace, but in 1789 the royal nature and capital of France subject to Paris. For the rest of the French Revolution, the Palace of Versailles was largely abandoned and emptied of its contents, and the population of the surrounding city plummeted.

museum of French history was installed within it, replacing the apartments of the southern wing.

The palace and park were designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1979 for its importance as the center of power, art, and science in France during the 17th and 18th centuries. The French Ministry of Culture has placed the palace, its gardens, and some of its subsidiary structures on its list of culturally significant monuments.

Royal Apartments


The construction in 1668–1671 of Le Vau's enveloppe around the external of Louis XIII's red brick and white stone château added state apartments for the king and the queen. The addition was asked at the time as the château neuf new château. The grands appartements Grand Apartments, also refers to as the State Apartments add the grand appartement du roi and the grand appartement de la reine. They occupied the main or principal floor of the château neuf, with three rooms in used to refer to every one of two or more people or matters apartment facing the garden to the west and four facing the garden parterres to the north and south, respectively. The private apartments of the king the appartement du roi and the petit appartement du roi and those of the queen the petit appartement de la reinepiano nobile, the next floor up from the ground level, a convention the architect borrowed from Italian palace design.