It
started as a royal palace.
King
Francis I of France was an art collector, and he wanted a palace
worthy of his wonderful collection. He had a very grand palace built
in Paris.
Every
French king after him expanded the palace or its grounds—and many
expanded the art collection as well. Louis XIV, especially, acquired
a lot more art, including the entire collection of Charles I of
England after that king was executed by rebellious forces. Louis XIV
called himself the Sun King and thought he was chosen by God to be
the absolute monarch of France, and he wanted an even larger, even
grander palace than the Louvre. So Louis XIV had the lavish Palace of
Versailles built outside of Paris, and he moved his court there. The
Louvre was at that point largely empty of people (although pretty
full of art!).
Near the end of the 1700s, the king of France was Louis XIV's great-great-great grandson Louis XVI. This is the king who ended up losing his head during
the French Revolution. Soon, on this date in 1793, France's
revolutionary government opened the Louvre as a public museum of art.
Winged Victory is one of the most famous statues in the Louvre. |
Check
out today's Louvre with this video.
The Mona Lisa is one of the museum's most famous exhibits. |
(Of
course, this video is just a quick look at the Louvre. As a matter of
fact, I spent HOURS in the Louvre, when I visited it, but all I got
was a quick look. You could visit the Louvre every day for a week and
still not have much time to look at each exhibit, the museum is so
huge and its displays are so numerous!)
When
I went to the Louvre, I found the building itself to be amazing. The
grand staircases, cavernous galleries, and varied display areas are
truly wondrous to behold and are as worthy of attention, to my mind,
as the art on exhibit.
Another
fascinating thing you can enjoy when you visit the Louvre is the
display of remnants of the original building on the site, King Philip
Augustus's fortress. These archeological findings were discovered
when construction began on an underground entrance to the
Louvre—which is under the famous glass pyramid—in 1983. In
addition to the original foundation, archeologists discovered the
usual assortment of pottery, clothing, baskets, coins, and even a
bird-shaped whistle. Lots of bones from cooking scraps were found, as
well, including one cooking pot with the bones of a pigeon still
inside, and archeologists found pieces of a ceremonial helmet made of
bronze and gilded with gold.
Also
on this date:
Thanks to Stephanie Schiffman Marushia for this posting this cool online tour of the Louvre: http://www.louvre.fr/en/visites-en-ligne
ReplyDeleteLouis XVI was executed during the French Revolution, not Louis XV.
ReplyDeleteOops! That's a pretty big mistake for me to make, and I am therefore really, really grateful to you for pointing it out, Jen. L.!
DeleteI made the "fix" on the post because I don't want anyone else to be misled by my slip-up.
Thanks again!