The world’s most famous watch — made for Marie Antoinette — is among the treasures on display.
Indian rhinoceros presented to Louis XV in 1769, stuffed in 1793 © Science Museum Group Today, Versailles: Science and ...
But the distinction between pure and applied science was never rigid; the remarkable developments in atronomical instruments ...
Stand up straight! You’re about to be received by royalty. To a stately, scene-setting soundtrack inspired by 17th-century ...
From trendsetting members of the royal to lucky YouTube child stars, we've listed the world’s wealthiest children by ...
With 14 royal suites, personal butlers, Michelin star feasts, and private guided tours, Le Grand Contrôle is one of the ...
TIMO Gruenert, chief executive officer of the luxury hotel brand Oetker Collection, says he wants his company to be the ...
How does this sound in terms of transport from Gare de Lyon to Versailles Palace due to track closure of RER C...I have read somewhere that Metro 14 from Gare de Lyon to Saint Lazare and then use ...
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, I rejoice that we are able to celebrate this Eucharist together at the beginning of my Pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Yesterday, from the heights of Mount Nebo ...
"I said, if I die, don't stop until you have killed them." Hours later, the palace communications office said it had referred "this active threat to the Presidential Security Command for immediate ...
the Palace of Versailles, and explain how monarchs Louis XIV, Louis XV and Louis XVI encouraged scientific pursuit and drew on technological advances to enhance France's prestige and extend its ...
Several interesting relics of the hapless monarch Louis XVI., collected by his faithful bodyservant Cl ry and at present in the possession of Clery's grandchildren, are now on view in Paris.