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Invalides was founded by Louis XIV to shelter 7,000
aged or crippled former soldiers.
This church is part of a large establishment built
to house disabled veterans. Although it is generally
classical in style, particularly in the rectilinearity
of the lower facade, the church does have some Baroque
elements. There is a dynamic movement toward the
center, which culminates in the central pediment.
In addition, the dome has some surprises. Unlike
St. Peter's dome, its loose model, it arranges the
windows in an unusual way--with pairs and single
windows alternating instead of a continuous row
of windows separated by buttresses or piers. Normally
a window would mark the main axis; here the main
axis has a pair of columns that separates the paired
windows. The lantern is a square in plan but it
is rotated so that its corner marks the main axis.
In the chapels of Saint-Louis are the tombs of Napoleons
brothers Joseph and Jérôme, of his
son and of the marshals of France. Immediately beneath
the cupola is a red porphyry sarcophagus that covers
the six coffins enclosing the body of Napoleon I,
which was returned from Saint-Helena in 1840 through
the efforts of King Louis-Philippe. Napoleons uniforms,
personal arms, and death bed are displayed in the
rich Musée de l'Armée (Army Museum)
at the front of the Invalides. Fewer than 100 pensioners
now live at the hospital, which is used as a paraplegic
centre.
The grassy, tree-lined Esplanade
des Invalides (810 feet wide) slopes gently for
1,410 feet to the Quai d'Orsay and the Pont Alexandre
III. The first stone for the bridge was laid in
1897 by Alexanders son, Tsar Nicholas II. A steel
span with upper works of stone, it embodies the
Gay Nineties, la Belle Epoque, solid, sumptuous,
and luxuriant, with its pomposity mocked by its
own gaiety. Finished in time for the International
Exposition of 1900, it leads to two faded souvenirs
of that years fair, the Grand Palais and the Petit
Palais. Both are still used for seasonal painting
salons and major visiting art exhibits, and the
Grand Palais also shelters overflow classes from
the Sorbonne and a science museum.
Hotels
near the Invalides
Hotel
La Belle Juliette St Germain Paris
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Hotel
de la Tour Maubourg Paris Invalides
- Hotel
de
la Motte Picquet Paris
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