Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Fontainebleau' has mentioned 'Renaissance' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 History 1.1 Medieval palace (12th century) 1.2 Renaissance Chxc3xa2teau of Francis I (1528xe2x80x931547) 1.3 Chxc3xa2teau of Henry II and Catherine de' Medici (1547xe2x80x931570) 1.4 Chxc3xa2teau of Henry IV (1570xe2x80x931610) 1.5 Chxc3xa2teau from Louis XIII through Louis XVI 1.6 Chxc3xa2teau during the Revolution and the First Empire 1.7 Chxc3xa2teau during the Restoration and the reign of Louis-Philippe (1815xe2x80x931848) 1.8 Chxc3xa2teau during the Second Empire 1.9 Chxc3xa2teau from the Third Republic to the present day 2 Grand Apartments 2.1 Gallery of Francis I 2.2 Ballroom 2.3 St. Saturnin's Chapels 2.4 Room of the Guards 2.5 Stairway of the King 2.6 Queen's bedroom 2.7 Boudoir of Marie-Antoinette 2.8 Throne Room of Napoleon (former bedroom of the King) 2.9 Council Chamber 2.10 Apartment of the Pope and of the Queen-Mothers 2.11 Gallery of Diana 3 Apartments of Napoleon 3.1 Emperor's bedroom 4 Theatre 5 Chinese Museum 6 Chapel of the Trinity 7 Gardens and the park 7.1 Garden of Diana 7.2 Carp pond, English garden, grotto and spring 7.3 Parterre and canal 8 Art and decoration - the School of Fontainebleau 9 Museum of Napoleon I 10 See also 11 References 11.1 Notes and citations 11.2 Bibliography 12 External links | WIKI |
Renaissance Chxc3xa2teau of Francis I (1528xe2x80x931547)[edit] | WIKI |
He commissioned the architect Gilles Le Breton to build a palace in the new Renaissance style, recently imported from Italy. | WIKI |
as well as a monumental Renaissance stairway, the portique de Serlio, to give access the royal apartments on the north side. | WIKI |
Broadly speaking, at Fontainebleau the Renaissance was introduced to France. | WIKI |
The chateau was surrounded by a new park in the style of the Italian Renaissance garden, with pavilions and the first grotto in France. | WIKI |
The Gallery of Francis I is one of the first and finest examples of Renaissance decoration in France. | WIKI |
It was originally constructed in 1528 as a passageway between the apartments of the King with the oval courtyard and the great chapel of the convent Trinitaires, but in 1531 Francis I made it a part of his royal apartments, and between 1533 and 1539 it was decorated by artists and craftsmen from Italy, under the direction of the painter Rosso Fiorentino, or Primatice, in the new Renaissance style. | WIKI |
The decorations added by Louis Philippe include a large vase decorated with Renaissance themes, made by the Sxc3xa8vres porcelain manufactory in 1832. | WIKI |
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. | WIKI |
During the late French Renaissance, the decoration of the Palace of Fontainebleau engaged some of the finest artists and craftsmen from Italy and France, including The style of painting and decoration they created became known as the School of Fontainebleau, and covered a period from about 1530 until about 1610. | WIKI |
Renaissance decorative motifs such as grotesques, strapwork and putti are common, as well as a certain degree of eroticism. | WIKI |
Surrounded by an immense park, the palace, to which notable Italian artists contributed, combines Renaissance and French artistic traditions. | UNESCO |
The Italian artists called upon by the king, painters, sculptors and architects, decisively and lastingly oriented French Renaissance art, to which they have given their most prestigious and precious examples. | UNESCO |
The Italian artists called upon by the king, painters, sculptors and architects, decisively and lastingly oriented French Renaissance art, to which they gave its most prestigious and precious examples. | UNESCO |
In the 20th century, numerous interventions were undertaken to open up or restore the most significant parts of the palace Renaissance and their decor. | UNESCO |