The Church of Saint-Louis des Invalides
The Hôtel des Invalides, an emblematic monument of the Parisian townscape and a major creation of the 17th century, is one of the French capital's most frequented sites with over one million visitors each year.
Renowned for its magnificent gilded dome, the building was designed on orders of Louis XIV to shelter invalid soldiers. It took the architects, Libéral Bruant and later Jules Hardouin-Mansart, thirty-five years to complete. At the centre of this vast complex stands the Church of Saint-Louis - a cathedral once dedicated to soldiers - and a lavish royal chapel, the Dôme.
Little by little, the church, which was renamed the "temple of Mars" in the French Revolution, became a military pantheon. The monumental tomb of Napoleon I was built under the Dôme.
The "Itinéraires" series, designed as a guide for cultural tourism, invites the visitor to discover the highways and byways of France's national heritage.
Characteristics
Editor : Editions du Patrimoine - Iitinéraires series
Language : English
- Number of pages
- 63
- Publication date
- 14/08/2024
- Dimensions
- 22,5 x 11 x 0,5 cm
- Categories
- Books, Guides, Foreign Languages, Museum Editions