Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Versailles' has mentioned 'Architect' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
[13] Now more confident,[14] Louis XIII decided to expand the Versailles residence,[9] and in 1631 tasked architect Philibert Le Roy with rebuilding the Versailles lodge as a chxc3xa2teau,[5][8] and garden designers Jacques Boyceau and Jacques de Nemours with laying gardens around it.
After jailing Fouquet in September, Louis XIV recruited its authors xe2x80x93 architect Louis Le Vau, landscape architect Andrxc3xa9 Le Nxc3xb4tre, and painter Charles Le Brun xe2x80x93 for a project of his own.
The first phase of the expansion (c. 1661xe2x80x931678) was designed and supervised by the architect Louis Le Vau.
The King ordered a further enlargement, which he entrusted to the young architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart.
It began with the original chxc3xa2teau, with the brick and stone and sloping slate mansard roofs of the Louis XIII style used by architect Philibert Le Roy.
Le Vau's design for the state apartments closely followed Italian models of the day, including the placement of the apartments on the main floor (the piano nobile, the next floor up from the ground level), a convention the architect borrowed from Italian palace design.
Although it was designed by architect Louis Le Vau, the staircase was built by Franxc3xa7ois dxe2x80x99Orbay and was primarily painted by Charles Le Brun.
It was rebuilt beginning in 1712 under the supervision of the First Architect of the King, Robert de Cotte, to showcase two paintings by Paolo Veronese, Eleazar and Rebecca and Meal at the House of Simon the Pharisee, which was a gift to Louis XIV from the Republic of Venice in 1664.
She asked the architect Richard Mique and painter Hubert Robert to design a new English-style landscape garden to replace the formal French garden.
One of the most celebrated features of the park is the Hameau de la Reine, a small rustic hamlet near the Petit Trianon created for Queen Marie Antoinette between 1783 and 1785 by the royal architect Richard Mique with the help of the painter Hubert Robert.
Le Nxc3xb4trexe2x80x99s gardens, designed by the architect himself, or by his imitators are innumerable: from Windsor to Cassel, to the Granja, Sweden, Denmark and Russia.