Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Fontainebleau' has mentioned 'Louis XIV' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
On the south side, Henry created a park, planted with pines, elms and fruit trees, and laid out a grand canal 1200 meters long, sixty years before Louis XIV built his own grand canal at Versailles.
King Louis XIV spent more days at Fontainebleau than any other monarch; he liked to hunt there every year at the end of summer and the beginning of autumn.
Louis XIV signed the Edict of Fontainebleau at the Chxc3xa2teau on 22 October 1685, revoking the policy of tolerance towards Protestants begun by Henry IV.
Louis XIV came to see her at the Chxc3xa2teau, did not mention the murder, and allowed her to continue her travels.
Louis XIV hunting near the Palace of Fontainebleau.
On May 19xe2x80x9320, 1717, during the Regency following the death of Louis XIV, the Russian Czar Peter the Great was a guest at Fontainebleau.
The renovation projects of Louis XV were more ambitious than those of Louis XIV.
The ornate ceiling over the bed was made in 1644 by the furniture-maker Guillaume Noyers for the Dowager Queen Anne of Austria, the mother of Louis XIV, and bears her initials.
The ceiling directly over the throne was made at the end of the reign of Louis XIV.
The room was enlarged under Louis XIV, and the decorator, Claude Audran, followed the same theme.
It was also the home of the Grand Dauphin, the oldest son of Louis XIV.
The Salon de Reception was the anteroom to the bedroom of Anne of Austria, wife of Louis XIII and mother of Louis XIV.
It had already been judged too small for the court of Napoleon III, and a new theatre had been begun in 1854 at the far eastern end of the wing of Louis XIV.
From the time of Francis I, the palace was surrounded by formal gardens, representing the major landscaping styles of their periods; the French Renaissance garden, inspired by the Italian Renaissance gardens; the French formal garden, the favorite style of Louis XIV; and, in the 18th and 19th century, the French landscape garden, inspired by the English landscape garden.
The fountain of Diana was originally in the center of garden, which at that time was enclosed by another wing, containing offices and later, under, Louis XIV, an orangerie.
The small octagonal house on an island in the center of the lake, Pavillon de l'xc3x88tang, was added during the reign of Louis XIV, then rebuilt under Napoleon I, and is decorated with his initial.
Between 1660 and 1664 the chief gardener of Louis XIV, Andrxc3xa9 Le Nxc3xb4tre, and Louis Le Vau rebuilt the parterre on a grander scale, filling it with geometric designs and path bordered with boxwood hedges and filled with colorful flowerbeds.
The fountains of Louis XIV were removed after his reign.
While Louis XIV spent more time at Fontainebleau than any other monarch, he made most of his modifications to gardens, rather than the interiors and decor.
Criterion (vi)xc2xa0: The Palace and the Park of Fontainebleau, a major royal residence for four centuries, are associated with events in French history of exceptional universal importance such as the repeal of the Edict of Nantes by Louisxc2xa0XIV in 1685 and the abdication of the Emperor Napoleonxc2xa0I in 1814.