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Home - Activities - Thematic Trails - From Palace to Museum: Eight Hundred Years of History

Thematic Trails : From Palace to Museum: Eight Hundred Years of History

Plafond Braque
© Musée du Louvre
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Author(s)
Frédéric Morvan d'après Geneviève Bresc-Bautier, conservateur général chargée du département des Sculptures
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Opening days: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Duration: 3 hrs.
Suitable for schoolchildren and teachers  Suitable for groups

The Palais du Louvre, which houses one of the most stunning collections of artworks in the world, is known first and foremost as a museum. Yet for almost seven hundred years the buildings constituted one of the principal residences of the kings and emperors of France.

Built shortly after 1190 by King Philippe Auguste as a defensive fortress, by the 14th century the Palais du Louvre had become a pleasant residence that occasionally served as a royal home. Francis I chose to turn it into a Renaissance "palace". Over time, a royal estate gradually developed. Henry IV ordered the château built by Catherine de Médicis in the Tuileries to be linked to the Louvre palace by a "grand gallery" bordering the Seine. Louis XIV, who resided at the Louvre until his departure for Versailles in 1678, completed the Cour Carrée (Square Court), which was closed off on the city side by a colonnade. When the court moved to Versailles, French monarchs lost interest in the Palais du Louvre.
In 1793, the Louvre became a museum, and has been given over ever since to the conservation and presentation of thousands of artworks and legacies of past civilizations. In the early 19th century, sovereigns transformed the interiors but carried out little building work. But from the mid-19th century onward, the Louvre underwent the largest phase of extension in its history. Napoleon III completed the unification of the Palais des Tuileries and the Palais du Louvre by building the Aile Denon (Denon wing) on the Seine side and finishing the Aile Richelieu on the rue de Rivoli side. In 1871, the Palais des Tuileries burned down. Thenceforth, the Louvre opened onto the great perspective facing western Paris.
The Grand Louvre project, launched by President François Mitterand in 1981, modernized the museum and extended it, with the opening in 1993 of the Richelieu wing, which formerly housed the Ministry of Finance.


Route
From the Pyramid, take the escalator towards Sully and proceed to the Medieval Louvre section. On either side of a rotunda are rooms devoted to the history of the Palais du Louvre. They contain models, paintings, plans and documents.
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Les Bâtisseurs du Louvre
Daniel Soulié. - Paris : Musée du Louvre, 2003. - 40 p. : ill. en coul. ; 19 cm. - (Chercheurs d'art)

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History of the Louvre

The History of the Louvre: From Château to Museum
The Louvre, in its successive architectural metamorphoses, has dominated central Paris since the late 12th century. Built on the city's western edge, the original structure was gradually engulfed as the city grew. The dark fortress of the early days was transformed into the modernized dwelling of François I and, later, the sumptuous palace of the Sun King, Louis XIV. Here we explore the history of this extraordinary edifice and of the museum that has occupied it since 1793.