LOUVRE is probably a shortened form of 'La Louverie', the wolf's lair. It is not known whether this name was the king's boast of his subjects' complaint. Probably, knowing Parisians, the latter. The first castle here was built in 1200. Its foundations can still be visited since the new entrance tunnels to the Louvre Museum include the basement levels of all the former buildings. François I (1515-1547) knocked it down and built a nice, new, L-shaped palace. In 1563 Queen Catherine de Médicis pulled down an old tile-factory (Tuilerie) six streets away to the East and built a new palace called the Palais des Tuileries. About 1600, she noticed she was getting wet walking through the streets from her own palace to the King's, so she began the Galerie du Bord de l'Eau to join them together. This meant a new building larger than the other two put together, since it had to be a quarter of a mile long and two stories high to bridge over the streets in between. Under Louis XIII and XIV - which means from 1610 to 1715 - The Cour Carrée multiplied the size of the original Louvre by four. At this point, Louis XIV decided the Louvre was far too small, and moved out to Versailles. The building became derelict and squatters moved in. At this stage, remember, the buildings of the Louvre were still in among the city streets. During the Revolution (1791) Louis XVI was forced to move back into the Tuileries, and then Napoleon I lived there. He added enormously to the original Art collection of François I. (It's easy to collect Art if you're a conquering Emperor, you just nick all the best stuff as you go along.) He had the Louvre restored to hold all this loot, and began a new gallery along his new main street, Rue de Rivoli. The job was finished by Napoleon III, who still lived in the Tuileries and let the public into the Louvre to see the Art collection. He also added the two bits designed to conceal the fact that the two long galleries aren't parallel. The whole job was finished, and all the streets in the middle demolished, by 1865; just in time for the fall of the Empire in 1870. During the suppression of the Commune in 1871, some twit burned down the Tuileries Palace. Obviously a serendipitous twit, however, because in so doing he opened up one of the most spectacular urban views in the world, La Grande Perspective; three straight miles from the Louvre to the Arc de Triomphe. In the middle of the open space between the arms of the Louvre is the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel, commemorating Napoleon's Austrian campaigns, with an inscription explaining why he had to go off and take Vienna instead of invading England. Originally it had on its top the four bronze horses from St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice, but when Napoleon was finally defeated, the Venetians took them back. The Louvre continues to develop; the moat at the Eastern end dates from the 1960s, when it was dug to show off the proportions of the colonnade; and at the very heart of the building is the new glass pyramid designed by I.M.Pei to form the entrance to Le Grand Louvre. Until now, the Louvre has not been all one Museum; a third of it, for example, was the Ministry of Finance. The pyramid leads to a series of underground entrances to the whole building. When the thing's finished, there will be ten miles of galleries; not a Museum you can nip round in half an hour. There are actually six sections; Greek & Roman Antiquities, Egyptian Antiquities, Oriental Antiquities; Sculpture; Paintings; and other works of Art and furniture. see also http://www.grenfell-banks.com/hgbservices/parihist.htm
The Louvre was first built as a fortress under the King Philippe Auguste in 1190. In the 1500s AND 1600s, the fortress is dismantled and a renaissance-style residence is built and embellished many times, until the mid 1700s where it is still a royal residence. Just before the French Revolution, it is decided to turn it into a museum. The idea will be put in effect by the revolutionaries in 1791. It remained a museum since that date.
The Louvre used to be a fortress, then a palace and then it became a museum later on.
the Louvre was used in the second world war.
a palace
as a holy gathering place
Le Loure is used as a picture gallery.
the Louvre is in Paris, where are you
The Louvre is in Europe.
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Le Louvre has been built and used for years as a royal Palace before Versailles
A Bogey Louvre, or Bogie Louvre, has nothing to do with the Louvre in Paris. A bogie refers to a class of train, wagon, or trolley with a chassis contaning wheels. The Louvre, as refered to in "Whistle up the chimney" (Storybook) is the wooden lining on the sides of the carriage, in the style of French louvres, which would allow air to circulate through the carriage. The bogie Louvre refered to in the book was also most likely a JLX 33820bogie Louvre van built by Tulloch Ltd. in 1969 and used to carry general freight around the NSW rail system and inter-state.
No. The Louvre is a normal, rectangular building. The Pyramide du Louvre, which is outside the main Louvre building is a square based pyramid.
It's in the Louvre in Paris. Here is the website for the Louvre... www.louvre.fr
The Louvre is in Paris, France.