The vivid story of the creation, renovation, and enduring legacy of
the most famous building in France: the palace of Versailles
Nothing represents the glorious and fraught history of France quite like
the Palace of Versailles. Made famous by the absolutist king Louis XIV,
Versailles became legendary for the splendor of its revels -- but then,
after the Revolution of 1789, it fell into disrepute as a reminder of
royal excess and abuse of power. Subsequent French governments struggled
with how to handle the opulent palace and grounds -- should the site be
memorialized, trivialized, rehabilitated, or even destroyed outright?
Drawing on a new wave of recent research, historian Colin Jones
masterfully traces the evolution of Versailles as a space of royal
politics and aristocratic pleasures, a building of mythic status, and
one of the world's great tourist destinations. Accessible and
compelling, this book is a must-read for all Francophiles.