
Gardens of the Palais-Royal: The illustration, from an 1863 guide to Paris, enlarges the apparent scale. The modern planting keeps the central lawn, fountains and clipped trees.

Colonade at the Palais Royal
The 'Palais Royal' is a palace and garden located near the
Ier arrondissement of
Paris. Opposite the north wing of the
Louvre, its famous forecourt (''cour d'honneur'') screened with columns (since 1986 containing
Daniel Buren's site-specific artpiece) faces the 'Place du Palais-Royal,' which was much enlarged by
Baron Haussmann after the
Rue de Rivoli was built for
Napoleon.
Never for long a royal palace, despite the misleading name, it was the home of
Richelieu, begun in 1629 (its architect,
Jacques Lemercier) and known as 'Palais Cardinal.' Richelieu bequeathed it to the French Crown. After
Louis XIII died, it housed the Queen-Mother
Anne of Austria, and
Cardinal Mazarin and the young
Louis XIV. Later the Palais-Royal became the Paris seat of the
dukes of Orleans, the cadet branch of the ruling
House of Bourbon, beginning with Louis XIV's brother, Philippe.
The Orléans at Palais-Royal
During the minority of
Louis XV, the regent of France was
Philip II, Duke of Orléans, ruling from the Palais-Royal (See
Régence.)
The
Orléans did not occupy the northeast wing, where Anne of Austra had her apartments, but the 'Palais Brion', where the future Regent when duc de Chartres commissioned from
Gilles-Marie Oppenord the decor of the ''Grand Appartement,'' the classic site of the light and lively ''Style Régence'' that presaged the future
rococo. These, and the Regent's more intimate ''Petits Appartements'', and his gallery painted with Virgilian subjects by
Coypel, were all demolished in 1784, for the installation of the Théâtre-Français, now the Comédie- Française.
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The Palais Brion, a separate
pavilion standing along rue Richelieu, to the west of the
Palais-Royal, had been purchased by Louis XIV from the heirs of
Cardinal Richelieu; in it the king had installed
Louise de La Vallière, who gave birth there to two sons of the king, in 1663 and 1665: both died young. The royal collection of antiquities was installed at the Palais Biron, under the care of the art critic and official court historian
André Félibien, appointed in 1673.
The public Palais-Royal
The Regent's great-grandson,
Louis Philip II, Duke of Orléans, who would become known as "
Philippe-Egalité" during the more radical phase of the
Revolution, made himself popular in Paris when he opened the gardens of the Palais-Royal to all Parisians and employed the
neoclassical architect
Victor Louis to rebuild the structures around the palace gardens, which had been the irregular backs of houses that faced the surrounding streets, and to enclose the gardens with regular colonnades (''above, right'') that were lined with smart shops (in one of which
Charlotte Corday bought the knife she used to stab
Jean Marat). Along the ''galeries'' ladies of the night lingered, and smart gambling casinos were lodged in second-floor quarters. There was a theatre at each end of the galleries; the larger one has been the seat of the
Comédie-Française, the state theatre company, since Napoleon's reign. The very first theatre in the Palais-Royal was originally built by Lemercier for
Cardinal Richelieu in
1641 (?). Under Louis XIV, the theater hosted plays by
Molière, from
1660 to Molière's death in
1673, followed by the Opera under the direction of
Jean-Baptiste Lully.
From the 1780s to 1837 the Palais Royal was once again the centre of Parisian political and social intrigue and the site of the most popular cafés. The historic restaurant "Le Grand Vefour" is still there. In 1786 a noon cannon was set up by a philosophical amateur, set on the
prime meridian of Paris, in which the sun's noon rays, passing through a lens, lit the cannon's fuse. The noon cannon is still fired at the Palais-Royal, though most of the ladies for sale have disappeared, those who inspired the Abbé Delille's lines;
:"Dans ce jardin on ne rencontre
:Ni champs, ni prés, ni bois, ni fleurs.
:Et si l'on y dérègle ses moeurs,
:Au moins on y règle sa montre."
("In this garden one encounters neither fields nor woods nor flowers. And, if one upsets one's morality, at least one may ''re-set'' one's watch.")
On
July 12,
1789 a young firebrand,
Camille Desmoulins, leapt on a café table and announced to the crowd that
Necker had been dismissed. "This dismissal," he cried, "is the
St. Bartholome's tocsin of the patriots." Drawing two pistols from under his coat, he declared that he would not be taken alive. "Aux armes!" He descended amid the embraces of the crowd, and his cry "To arms!" resounded on all sides. Two days later, the
Bastille was taken.
After the Restoration of the Bourbons, at the Palais-Royal the young
Alexandre Dumas obtained employment in the office of the powerful
duc d'Orléans, who regained control of the Palace during the Restoration.. In the
Revolution of 1848, the Paris mob trashed and looted the Palais-Royal. Under the
Second Empire the Palais-Royal was home to the cadet branch of the Bonaparte family, represented by
Prince Napoleon, Napoleon III's cousin.
Today it houses the ''
Conseil d'État'', the
Constitutional Council, and the
Ministry of Culture. At the rear of the garden are the older buildings of the
Bibliothèque Nationale, the national library of deposit, with a collection of more than 6,000,000 books, documents, maps, and prints; most of the collections have been moved to more modern settings elsewhere.
See also
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Hôtel de Rambouillet
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The Louvre
External links
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Palais-Royal in Paris : History and Description
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Satellite image from Google Maps
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Palais Royal – Louvre district - current photographs and of the years 1900
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Virtual Paris - Photos of Palais-Royal and VR views