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Louvre Museum

Louvre Museum, also known as Musée du The Louvre is a famous museum in Paris, France. It was a fortress that originated in the late 12th century, and now is the renowned museum where the painting of Mona Lisa is located.

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Louvre is what kind of museum?

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The Louvre is an internationally renowned art museum in Paris, France.

When did they built the getty museum?

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The original 1954. The latest newest one Opened dec 16 1997

Is the louvre an art museum?

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In terms of floor space (square ft/m), no.

That said, it is the most visited annually (some 8,880,000 people).

The largest art museum in the world is the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC (aka the Met). The single building is *over* 2,000,000 million square feet (more than 185,806.08 square meters). It is also the 2nd most visited annually with 6,004,254 visitors.

What is the surface area of the Louvre pyramid?

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The Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt originally stood at a height of 481 feet and had a square base that was 754 feet on one side. With this information and a little bit of calculation, it is easy to find the original surface area of the pyramid (before erosion). The original surface area was approximately 1,490,054.8 ft2.

Here are my calculations:

S=1/2lP+B

P=4s

P=4(754)

P=3,016 ft

So now S=1/2l(3,016)+B

B=s2

B=7542

B=568,516 ft2

Revise and find that S=1/2l(3,016)+568,516 ft2

Now, all we need is the slant height (l). To do this, we must use the Pythagorean Theorem.

A2+B2=C2

3772+4812=l2

142,129+231,361=l2

373,490=l2

l≈611.1 ft

S≈1/2(611.1)(3,016)+568,516

S≈1,490,054.8 ft2

Why was the musee du louvre built?

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The Musée du Louvre (French pronunciation: [myze dy luvʁ]) - in English, the Louvre Museum or simply the Louvre was built in the late 12th century under Philip II.

How much art is in the Louvre?

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The Musée du Louvre contains more than 380,000 objects and displays 35,000 works of art in eight curatorial departments

What is the floor area of the Louvre?

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The exhibition space of the Louvre museum is 60600 square meters, according to information from the museum.

Is The Scream in the Louvre Museum?

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No...its in the National Gallery, Oslo

Why is the louvre pyramid important?

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The Louvre Pyramid is one of the largest and most important museums in the world. One of the most famous works of art is "The Mona Lisa"

What is one of the artifacts inside the Louvre museum?

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the mona lisa ewinged victory venus de milo virgin and child and st anne virgin of rocks the slave louvre pyramid napoleon visiting victims of jafa leading of leabirty and losts more like napoleon apartments

How much does it cost to be in the louvre?

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To see the Louvre pyramid is free. To get inside the Louvre, you must spend money.

Walking distance from Louvre to Notre-Dame?

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From the Louvre Pyramid to Notre Dame cathedral, the walking distance is 1.7 km - about 20 to 25 minutes walking mostly on the banks of the Seine river.

What was the Louvre made out of?

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Glass is used to build the pyramid located outside the Museum. Cement and Stone were used to construct the museum's walls and floor. Metals were used in the museum for railings and other purposes.

What did the Louvre used to be?

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LOUVRE is probably a shortened form of 'La Louverie', the wolf's lair. It is not known whether this name was the king's boast of his subjects' complaint. Probably, knowing Parisians, the latter. The first castle here was built in 1200. Its foundations can still be visited since the new entrance tunnels to the Louvre Museum include the basement levels of all the former buildings. François I (1515-1547) knocked it down and built a nice, new, L-shaped palace. In 1563 Queen Catherine de Médicis pulled down an old tile-factory (Tuilerie) six streets away to the East and built a new palace called the Palais des Tuileries. About 1600, she noticed she was getting wet walking through the streets from her own palace to the King's, so she began the Galerie du Bord de l'Eau to join them together. This meant a new building larger than the other two put together, since it had to be a quarter of a mile long and two stories high to bridge over the streets in between. Under Louis XIII and XIV - which means from 1610 to 1715 - The Cour Carrée multiplied the size of the original Louvre by four. At this point, Louis XIV decided the Louvre was far too small, and moved out to Versailles. The building became derelict and squatters moved in. At this stage, remember, the buildings of the Louvre were still in among the city streets. During the Revolution (1791) Louis XVI was forced to move back into the Tuileries, and then Napoleon I lived there. He added enormously to the original Art collection of François I. (It's easy to collect Art if you're a conquering Emperor, you just nick all the best stuff as you go along.) He had the Louvre restored to hold all this loot, and began a new gallery along his new main street, Rue de Rivoli. The job was finished by Napoleon III, who still lived in the Tuileries and let the public into the Louvre to see the Art collection. He also added the two bits designed to conceal the fact that the two long galleries aren't parallel. The whole job was finished, and all the streets in the middle demolished, by 1865; just in time for the fall of the Empire in 1870. During the suppression of the Commune in 1871, some twit burned down the Tuileries Palace. Obviously a serendipitous twit, however, because in so doing he opened up one of the most spectacular urban views in the world, La Grande Perspective; three straight miles from the Louvre to the Arc de Triomphe. In the middle of the open space between the arms of the Louvre is the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel, commemorating Napoleon's Austrian campaigns, with an inscription explaining why he had to go off and take Vienna instead of invading England. Originally it had on its top the four bronze horses from St. Mark's Cathedral in Venice, but when Napoleon was finally defeated, the Venetians took them back. The Louvre continues to develop; the moat at the Eastern end dates from the 1960s, when it was dug to show off the proportions of the colonnade; and at the very heart of the building is the new glass pyramid designed by I.M.Pei to form the entrance to Le Grand Louvre. Until now, the Louvre has not been all one Museum; a third of it, for example, was the Ministry of Finance. The pyramid leads to a series of underground entrances to the whole building. When the thing's finished, there will be ten miles of galleries; not a Museum you can nip round in half an hour. There are actually six sections; Greek & Roman Antiquities, Egyptian Antiquities, Oriental Antiquities; Sculpture; Paintings; and other works of Art and furniture. see also http://www.grenfell-banks.com/hgbservices/parihist.htm

Where is the Louvre museum located?

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The Lourve is a Museum in Paris,France. It holds great art masterpieces like the Mona Lisa.

Why is the Louvre Palace so important?

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The Louvre is important because, one time in history, elephants were housed in the building. As you probably know, there are no elephants in France anymore. That is because Napoleon stole and killed all of them. He was an evil, evil man. The Louvre is know a museum because they wanted all the french people to remember that awful day when Napoleon killed all the elephants in France. If you've ever been to the Louvre, every art piece in it has some sort of connections with the elephants. The only art piece that doesn't is the Mona Lisa.