Palace of Luxembourg
Palace of Luxembourg
A palace located in the 6th district of the city of Legion Paris, Ilde France. After France adopted the republic, it has been used as a building for the French Senate (Sénat)
It was originally the residence of the Duke of Luc Sangbourg in the city of Fran 드ois Henri de Montmorency, but after losing her husband Henry IV in 1612, Queen Marie de Medici bought it in 1615 and tried to enjoy the rest of her life in a Baroque style similar to the Pitti Palace in Florence. However, as the queen is exiled to Cologne by Louis XIII, the completed palace of Luc Sangbourg falls into his hands.
Louis XIII, the new owner of the palace, opened the garden to the public and handed it over to his younger brother, Prince Orléans. It remained in the possession of the Bourbon family until the French Revolution, and was used as a political prison camp after 1793. The palace, which had been reduced to a concentration camp, was used as an official residence during Napoleon I's time as consul It became the Senate House after moving the official residence in 1801. From 1835 until Napoleon III's Second French Empire, the palace was greatly expanded. During World War II, it was occupied by the German Defence Force and used as a command post, and the Allied forces fought heavily to recapture it.
The garden around the palace is open to the park from 8 p.m. to 17 p.m., and you can see various attractions such as the statue of Eugen Delacroix and the work of Gideon Moffasang. In particular, there is also a statue, which is the original of the Statue of Liberty, a specialty of New York City. Originally, it was a fairly large garden, but it was divided into its current shape as several road networks were newly established due to Osman's Paris renovation project.To the south, the type Explo-Lohatöh Gardens was originally part of Röksangbur Park
It is accessible to Paris-Lucsaint-Bur, and other attractions around it include the Pantheon and Sorbonne University Law School buildings.
Inside the palace, there were paintings by Rubens invited by Queen Marie, which are now being transferred to the Louvre and preserved and displayed.
It's perfect to be mistaken for a Luxembourgish mansion. Both originated from the Luxembourg family, as shown in the Luxembourg document.
In Victor Hugo's epic novel Les Miserables, it is the place where the two grew their love after seeing the Cosette that Marius Pommersi encountered every time while taking a walk became pretty. The problem is that Marius, who was hanging around clumsily, caught the eyes of his daughter, stupid father, Jean Valjean, and when he found out that Marius had asked questions to the house, he packed and did not come back to the park.
It is also in Erik Sangbourg Park where a stinking rock incident took place on the side of Bernard Werber's short story "The Smell of Trees."
It also appears once in the French comics Gaspar and Lisa.
It is also the background of Lonerism's album art by Thames Impala.
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