Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Palace and Park of Versailles' has mentioned 'French Revolution' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The Palace of Versailles (/vxc9x9bxc9x99rxcbx88saxc9xaa, vxc9x9cxcbx90rxcbx88saxc9xaa/ vair-SY, vur-SY;[1] French: Chxc3xa2teau de Versailles [xcax83xc9x91to d(xc9x99) vxc9x9bxcax81sxc9x91j] (listen)) was the principal royal residence of France from 1682, under Louis XIV, until the start of the French Revolution in 1789, under Louis XVI.
The Palace was stripped of all its furnishings after the French Revolution, but many pieces have been returned and many of the palace rooms have been restored.
In 1722, when the King came of age, he moved his residence and the government back to Versailles, where it remained until the French Revolution in 1789.
[42] The Queen was at the Petit Trianon in July 1789 when she first learned of the beginning of the French Revolution.
The French Revolution of 1830 brought a new monarch, Louis-Philippe to power, and a new ambition for Versailles.
In October 1789, early in the French Revolution, the last banquet for the royal guardsmen was hosted by the King in the opera, before he departed for Paris.
Most of the apartments of the palace were entirely demolished (in the main building, practically all of the apartments were annihilated, with only the apartments of the king and queen remaining almost intact), and turned into a series of several large rooms and galleries: the Coronation Room (whose original volume was left untouched by Louis-Philippe), which displays the celebrated painting of the coronation of Napoleon I by Jacques-Louis David; the Hall of Battles; commemorating French victories with large-scale paintings; and the 1830 room, which celebrated Louis-Philippe's own coming to power in the French Revolution of 1830.
She was at the Petit Trianon in July 1789 when she first heard the news from Paris of the storming of the Bastille and the beginning of the French Revolution.