Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Versailles' has mentioned 'Chapel' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 History 1.1 The palace of Louis XIV 1.2 Enlargement of the Palace (1678xe2x80x931715) 1.3 The Palace of Louis XV 1.4 Louis XVI, and the Palace during the Revolution 1.5 19th century xe2x80x93 history museum and government venue 1.6 20th century 1.7 21st century 2 Ownership and management 3 Architecture and plan 4 Royal Apartments 4.1 Ambassador's Staircase 4.2 The State Apartments of the King 4.2.1 The Salon of Hercules 4.2.2 The Salon of Abundance 4.2.3 The Salon of Venus 4.2.4 The Salon of Mercury 4.2.5 The Salon of Mars 4.2.6 The Salon of Apollo 4.2.7 The Salon of Diana 4.3 Private apartments of the King and Queen 4.3.1 Private apartments of the King 4.3.2 Private apartments of The Queen 5 The Grand Gallery 5.1 The War Salon 5.2 The Hall of Mirrors 5.3 The Peace Salon 6 Royal Chapel 7 Royal Opera 8 Museum of the History of France 9 Gardens and fountains 9.1 The Parterre d'Eau and the Parterre and Fountain of Latona 9.2 Fountain of the Chariot of Apollo and the Grand Canal 9.3 North Parterre, Dragon Basin, and Basin of Neptune 9.4 South Parterre and the Orangerie 9.5 The Fountains and the shortage of water 9.5.1 Sanitation 10 The Bosquets or Groves 11 The Grand Trianon and Petit Trianon 12 The Hamlet of Marie Antoinette 13 Modern Political and ceremonial functions 14 Cost 15 Gallery 16 See also 17 Notes 17.1 Citations 18 References 18.1 Web sources 19 Further reading 20 External links
Hardouin-Mansart died in 1708 and so the chapel was completed by his assistant Robert de Cotte in 1710.
His main contributions were the construction of the Salon of Hercules, which connected the main building of the Palace with the north wing and the chapel (1724xe2x80x9336); and the royal opera theater, designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel, and built between 1769 and 1770.
The Marble Court and facades of the first Chateau, embellished by Louis Le Vau (1661xe2x80x9368) and then Hardouin-Mansart in (1679xe2x80x931681) Plan of the main floor (c. 1837, with north to the right), showing the Hall of Mirrors in red, the Hall of Battles in green, the Royal Chapel in yellow, and the Royal Opera in blue Aerial view from the garden The facade facing the garden, with the royal apartments and the Gallery of Mirrors between them[citation needed]
This was originally a chapel.
Courtiers gathered in the Hall to watch the King walk from his apartments to the chapel, and sometimes took the occasion to present him with requests.
Royal Chapel[edit]
Royal Chapel seen from the ground floor The Royal Chapel, seen from the Royal Gallery The Royal Chapel, the tallest building of the Palace Altar and organ of the Royal Chapel Glory holding a portrait of Louis XV, by Antoine Vassxc3xa9, in the chapel vestibule
The chapel was the last building at Versailles to be completed during the reign of Louis XIV.
Daily services, wedding ceremonies, and baptisms were held in this chapel until 1789.
The corridor and vestibule that connected the Chapel and the State Apartments included later art, commissioned by Louis XV, intended to portray the link between Divinity and the King: a statue of Glory Holding the Medallion of Louis XV, by Antoine Vassxc3xa9; and Royal Magnanimity by Jacques Bousseau.
The Royal Chapel has been under renovation for 767 days.
In recent years, eleven rooms on the ground floor between the Chapel and the Opera have been turned into a history of the palace, with audiovisual displays and models.
The Orangerie and the Grand Trianon are also the work of Mansart, who was assisted by Robert de Cotte in the construction of the Royal Chapel.