Grande Écurie | |
The Grande Écurie at the Palace of Versailles, taken from the Pavillon Dufour. | |
| |
48°48′14″N 2°7′42″E / 48.80389°N 2.12833°E | |
Location | France, île de France, Yvelines, Versailles |
---|---|
Designer | Jules Hardouin-Mansart |
Beginning date | 1682 |
The Grande Écurie (literal French for "The Great Stable") is a building located in Versailles (Yvelines), on the Place d'Armes, opposite the Palace, between the avenues of Saint-Cloud and Paris. Together with the Petite Écurie (literal French for "The Small Stable"), it formed the Royal Stables (an institution that employed around a thousand people [note 1] under Louis XIV), and was built under the direction of architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart and completed in 1682. [1]
Equipped with a riding school, it housed the king's [2] hunting and war horses.
The Grande Écurie replaced the King's stable, which then became the Queen's stable.
Identical to the Petite Écurie, from which it is separated by the Avenue de Paris, under the Old Regime, the Great Stable was under the orders of the Grand Squire of France and housed the school for the King's Pages. Between 1680 and 1830, the Grande Écurie was also home to the École de Versailles (literal French for "the Versailles School"), the cradle of French learned horsemanship.[ citation needed]
Between 1793 and 1794, the emblem on the pediment was removed. [1]
From 1854, the stables were occupied by the army. [3]
By decree of 20 August 1913, the facades overlooking the main courtyard and the avenues of Paris and Saint-Cloud, the facades of the two pavilions, and the gates bordering the Place d'Armes were classified as historic monuments. [4]
For the first time, the Palace of Versailles organized an international show jumping competition from 5 to 7 May 2017 in the courtyard of the Grande Écurie. [5]
The buildings are arranged around five courtyards:
Behind the main gate, there was a rectangular riding arena, which is now home to the Académie Équestre Nationale du Domaine de Versailles. [10]
The galleries are single in the Great Stable, while the Small Stable has double galleries separated by colonnades. The ceilings of the galleries are vaulted.
The visible walls of the Palace are made of stone, while the less visible walls are made of red brick with stone facing.
The building has rectangular windows on the first floor and dormer windows in the attic.
Sculptures can be seen on the pediment, tympanum, and jambs of the main gate.
Side entrances look out onto Avenue de Saint-Cloud and Avenue de Paris.
In 2016, to mark the reopening of the Gallery of Coaches, the "King's Stable" sign was installed on the gate.
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)Grande Écurie | |
The Grande Écurie at the Palace of Versailles, taken from the Pavillon Dufour. | |
| |
48°48′14″N 2°7′42″E / 48.80389°N 2.12833°E | |
Location | France, île de France, Yvelines, Versailles |
---|---|
Designer | Jules Hardouin-Mansart |
Beginning date | 1682 |
The Grande Écurie (literal French for "The Great Stable") is a building located in Versailles (Yvelines), on the Place d'Armes, opposite the Palace, between the avenues of Saint-Cloud and Paris. Together with the Petite Écurie (literal French for "The Small Stable"), it formed the Royal Stables (an institution that employed around a thousand people [note 1] under Louis XIV), and was built under the direction of architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart and completed in 1682. [1]
Equipped with a riding school, it housed the king's [2] hunting and war horses.
The Grande Écurie replaced the King's stable, which then became the Queen's stable.
Identical to the Petite Écurie, from which it is separated by the Avenue de Paris, under the Old Regime, the Great Stable was under the orders of the Grand Squire of France and housed the school for the King's Pages. Between 1680 and 1830, the Grande Écurie was also home to the École de Versailles (literal French for "the Versailles School"), the cradle of French learned horsemanship.[ citation needed]
Between 1793 and 1794, the emblem on the pediment was removed. [1]
From 1854, the stables were occupied by the army. [3]
By decree of 20 August 1913, the facades overlooking the main courtyard and the avenues of Paris and Saint-Cloud, the facades of the two pavilions, and the gates bordering the Place d'Armes were classified as historic monuments. [4]
For the first time, the Palace of Versailles organized an international show jumping competition from 5 to 7 May 2017 in the courtyard of the Grande Écurie. [5]
The buildings are arranged around five courtyards:
Behind the main gate, there was a rectangular riding arena, which is now home to the Académie Équestre Nationale du Domaine de Versailles. [10]
The galleries are single in the Great Stable, while the Small Stable has double galleries separated by colonnades. The ceilings of the galleries are vaulted.
The visible walls of the Palace are made of stone, while the less visible walls are made of red brick with stone facing.
The building has rectangular windows on the first floor and dormer windows in the attic.
Sculptures can be seen on the pediment, tympanum, and jambs of the main gate.
Side entrances look out onto Avenue de Saint-Cloud and Avenue de Paris.
In 2016, to mark the reopening of the Gallery of Coaches, the "King's Stable" sign was installed on the gate.
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)