Visit the 400-Year-Old Palais Royal

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Visit the 400-Year-Old Palais Royal
Parisians know that the classiest little haven of tranquility just a five-minute walk from the Louvre is the garden of the Palais Royal. There, relaxing on benches decorated with literary quotes, strolling the pathways lined with lime trees, pausing to admire the splash of a fountain or the pink froth of the magnolias, you can lose yourself in a book or just enjoy a few minutes of peace. And yet its past has often been decidedly more turbulent than tranquil. An exhibition earlier this year, marking 400 years of the Palais Royal, made it clear that over the centuries this site has been both a hub of raucous entertainment and a hotbed of radical ideas, the place where several revolutions can be said to have started. It began in the 17th century as the Palais Cardinal, the palatial residence Cardinal Richelieu built for himself and it only became royal when he left it in his will to Louis XIII. As he grew up, Louis XIV preferred other palaces – the Louvre, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Versailles – and the Palais Royal became the Paris base of his younger brother, Philippe, Duke of Orléans (1640-1701). He and his wife created the ornamental gardens and began hosting lavish gatherings which gradually established their home as the place for the crème de la crème of French society to mix and mingle. The palace then passed down the Orléans line, becoming livelier and more decadent as time went on.  Palais Royal garden and bassin. Photo: Marian Jones Louis Philippe d’Orléans (1747-93) needed money fast to fund his extravagant lifestyle, so he had apartments and arcades built around the edge of the grounds and rented them out, inviting the public in to shop, eat and seek entertainment. It proved extremely popular and before long the clientele widened to include all layers of Parisian society, from the elite to assorted gamblers, pickpockets and prostitutes. Debauchery aside, it is surprising to realize that many of the activities available at the Palais Royal today have their roots in this 18th-century flourishing. Arcades in the Palais Royal. Photo: Marian Jones
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Lead photo credit : Cour d'Honneur, Palais Royal. Photo: Marian Jones

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After a career teaching Modern Languages (French and German), Marian turned to freelance writing and is now a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers, specializing in all things French and – especially! – Parisian. She’s in Paris as often as possible, visiting places old and new, finding out their stories and writing it all up as soon as she gets home. She also runs the podcast series City Breaks, offering in-depth coverage of popular city break destinations, with lots of background history and cultural information. The Paris series currently has 22 episodes, but more will surely follow when time allows!