He moved his court back to Paris from Versailles at their insistence.
Louis XIV (5 September 1638 - 1 September 1715) ruled as King of France and of Navarre. He ascended the throne a few months before his fifth birthday. Louis remained on the throne until his death in September 1715, four days before his seventy-seventh birthday. His reign lasted seventy-two years, three months, and eighteen days, the longest documented for any European monarch to date.
Louis XIV had it built it on the place of his father's Louis XIII small hunting lodge.
Hampton Court Palace was built by Cardonal Wolsey. ;)
Tennis Court Oath. Women's March on Versailles. Storming of the Bastille. Regicide of Louis XVI. Reign of Terror. Execution of Robespierre. Napoleon's coup.
When Louis XIV expanded it into a palace
Le Roi soleil - The Sun King
There was already a small chateau on the spot where the palace is now. In the beginning in 1669, architect Louis Le Vau, landscape architect André Le Nôtre, and painter-decorator Charles Le Brun began a detailed renovation and expansion of the château. This was done to fulfill Louis XIV's desire to establish a new centre for the royal court. Following the Treaty of Nijmegen in 1678, he began to gradually move the court to Versailles. The court was officially established there on 6 May 1682. Louis XIV was the one to order the build of the Versailles palace.
They started building the actual Palace in 1662 and in 1682 the King Louis XIV and Queen (Madame de Maintenon, his second wife) and their whole court moved in.
His principal home was the court, at the Versailles palace. He did have some summer retreats where he liked to stay for a few weeks, but his main home was the Versailles palace. When he and his family were arrested, they lived in the Tuilerie palace (which once used to be the principal and only palace of France, before Louis XIV decided to build the Versailles palace) and after that he and his family were captured in the Temple prison.
Louis XIV commissioned the build and moved in his entire court in 1682, but is was never really finished. Louis XV and Louis XVI both expanded the Palace even further.It was built during the Reign of King Louis XIV.
He had several. In the days before proper sanitation, houses got smelly quite quickly, so the court would move on to another palace while the last one was cleaned. Much of the furniture would move, too. In Paris, the King lived in the Palais des Tuileries, part of the Louvre; around Paris there were royal residences at St. Cloud, Marly, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Rambouillet, Marly, Fontainebleau and Sceaux. However, I think the answer you are groping for is VERSAILLES, the vast palace which Louis XIV had built to house himself and the entire court outside Paris. Even here, there was provision for the Royal entourage to move around; the King could move into the Trianon while the Royal Apartments were refurbished.
King Louis XIV of France lived primarily in the Palace of Versailles, located near Paris. He transformed Versailles into a symbol of absolute monarchy and power, where he centralized his rule and hosted lavish events to assert his authority.
They started building the actual Palace in 1662 and in 1682 the King Louis XIV and Queen (Madame de Maintenon, his second wife) and their whole court moved in. The Palace was officially never finished, since Louis XIV had a lot more construction planned, but that never happened.
Versailles. Or, more specifically, the Chateau de Versailles (castle of Versailles) From Wikipedia: Louis XIV had the Chateau of Versailles outside Paris, originally a hunting lodge built by his father, converted into a spectacular royal palace in a series of four major and distinct building campaigns. By the end of the third building campaign, the Château had taken on most of the appearance that it retains to this day, except for the Royal Chapel in the last decade of the reign. He officially moved there, along with the royal court, on May 6, 1682.
France, in King Louis XIV's court, Versailles.
Louis XIV has Versailles built because he wanted to distance himself from the Parisians and to keep the power within the nobility, this of course proved unsuccessful.