voile du palais - definição. O que é voile du palais. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é voile du palais - definição

SEAT OF THE FRENCH SENATE
Palais du Luxembourg; Palais Luxembourg; Palace of Luxembourg; Prison du Luxembourg; Château du Luxembourg; Palais d'Orléans
  • Portalis]]}}
  • Library ceiling with ''Dante's Inferno'' by Delacroix
  • Ceiling of the Salle du Livre d'Or
  • Salle des Conférences
  • Floor plan (1752) shows the large enclosed ''[[cour d'honneur]]'' and the long Rubens gallery in the right wing
  • Chalgrin's grand staircase
  • Plan of the ''corp de logis'' from 1804 to 1836 with the old Senate chamber
  • Plan showing Gisors's garden wing and Senate chamber (gray) and Chalgrin's grand staircase (blue)
  • View of the Palais d'Orléans, c. 1643, with the garden [[parterre]] designed by [[Jacques Boyceau]] visible behind

Musée du Petit Palais, Avignon         
  • Musée du Petit Palais in Avignon
  • The Annunciation, by [[Cosimo Rosselli]]
  • The Virgin in glory with the Apostles, by [[Mariotto di Nardo]]
MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY IN AVIGNON, SOUTHERN FRANCE
Petit Palais, Avignon; Musee du Petit Palais, Avignon; Musée du Petit Palais Avignon
The Musée du Petit Palais is a museum and art gallery in Avignon, southern France. It opened in 1976 and has an exceptional collection of Renaissance paintings of the Avignon school as well as from Italy, which reunites many "primitives" from the collection of Giampietro Campana.
Palais des Thés         
  • Interior of a shop
TEA RETAIL COMPANY
Le Palais du Thes; Le Palais du Thés; Le Palais des Thes; Le Palais des Thés
Palais des Thés is a tea company founded in Paris in 1987. It has 45 specialty tea shops in France, Japan, Israel, Ireland, Norway, Belgium and Germany.
Louvre Palace         
  • AGLAE]], located under the [[Cour du Carrousel]]
  • Amphithéâtre Rohan}} of the [[Ecole du Louvre]], after renovation in 2014
  • Appartement Napoleon III}}
  • date=10 February 2017}}</ref>
  • page=15}}
  • [[Carlo Marochetti]]'s ''Duke of Orléans'', placed in 1845 in the [[Cour Carrée]] and now at [[Château d'Eu]]
  • The Gambetta monument in the [[Cour Napoléon]], c.1900
  • First execution with guillotine at Place du Caroussel, August 1792
  • Henry IV]] displayed in the Louvre's lower main room on 10–21 June 1610, engraving after a painting by [[François Quesnel]]
  • Pavillon Denon}} from the underground lobby of the Pyramid
  • Charles V]] pictured with a precious book, miniature of [[John of Salisbury]]'s ''[[Policraticus]]'', 1372
  • [[Paul Landowski]]'s ''Architecture'', placed in 1908 in the [[Cour Napoléon]] and now in Reims
  • Opening of the annual legislative session by [[Louis XVIII]] on 28 January 1823, in the same room restored by [[Percier and Fontaine]]
  • Medal of [[Louis XIV]] by [[Jean Varin]] (1666), made at the Louvre mint
  • The [[Tuileries Palace]] connected by the Grande Galerie to the Renaissance Louvre on [[Merian map of Paris]], 1615
  • The Napoleon Courtyard, with Ieoh Ming Pei's pyramid in its center, at dusk
  • La salle des terres cuites du musée Napoléon III au Louvre}}'', by Sébastien Charles Giraud, Salon of 1866
  • North wing of Louvre facing main courtyard
  • Salle des Séances du Conseil d'Etat}}, Lemercier Wing
  • The Louvre on the [[Turgot map of Paris]] (1739) showing the unfinished wings of the Cour Carrée and new constructions in its midst
  • The Louvre viewed from the [[Pavillon de Flore]], anonymous drawing held at the [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]], 1828
  • Aerial view of the Louvre Palace and the [[Tuileries Garden]]
  • Plan of Louvre and Tuileries by stage of construction
  • Plan of the medieval Louvre and [[wall of Philippe Auguste]] with additions to the Louvre made during the reign of Charles V, with indication of the footprint of later buildings<ref>Figure from Berty 1868, [http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6517947c/f180.image.r=.langEN after p. 128 (at Gallica)], with modifications based on a figure from Hautecoeur 1940, p. 2.</ref>
  • Stamp of the Royal Printing House located at the Louvre, 1677
  • Jardin de l'Infante}}, now in Poissy
  • Salle des Caryatides}}, 24 October 1795
  • newly built Denon Wing]], anonymous photograph ca. 1860
  • salle étrusque}}), from the [[Satire Ménippée]]
  • Café Marly}} and the [[Cour Napoléon]], photographed in 2010
FORMER ROYAL PALACE, NOW HOSTING THE LOUVRE MUSEUM IN PARIS, FRANCE
Palais du louvre; Palais du Louvre; Château du Louvre; Porte des Lions
The Louvre Palace (, ), often referred to simply as the Louvre, is an iconic French palace located on the Right Bank of the Seine in Paris, occupying a vast expanse of land between the Tuileries Gardens and the church of Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois. Originally a military facility, it has served numerous government-related functions in the past, including intermittently as a royal residence between the 14th and 18th centuries.

Wikipédia

Luxembourg Palace

The Luxembourg Palace (French: Palais du Luxembourg, pronounced [palɛ dy lyksɑ̃buʁ]) is at 15 Rue de Vaugirard in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. It was originally built (1615–1645) to the designs of the French architect Salomon de Brosse to be the royal residence of the regent Marie de' Medici, mother of King Louis XIII. After the Revolution it was refashioned (1799–1805) by Jean Chalgrin into a legislative building and subsequently greatly enlarged and remodeled (1835–1856) by Alphonse de Gisors. The palace has been the seat of the upper houses of the various French national legislatures (excepting only the unicameral National Assembly of the Second Republic) since the establishment of the Sénat conservateur during the Consulate; as such, it has been home to the Senate of the Fifth Republic since its establishment in 1958.

Immediately west of the palace on the Rue de Vaugirard is the Petit Luxembourg, now the residence of the Senate President; and slightly further west, the Musée du Luxembourg, in the former orangery. On the south side of the palace, the formal Luxembourg Garden presents a 25-hectare (62-acre) green parterre of gravel and lawn populated with statues and large basins of water where children sail model boats.