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  1. In 1854, forty years after the fall of Napoleon, his great-nephew Emperor Napoleon III and the latter's sidekick, Baron Haussmann, began the transformation of Bois de Vincennes into a leisure escape for the large population in the east of Paris.

  2. Jan 3, 2018 · It was only when Louis XIV started the process of moving his court to Versailles in the 1660s that Vincennes, along with the king’s other – most unloved – dwelling, the Louvre, relinquished its royal function. ILLUSTRIOUS INHABITANTS.

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  4. The Bois de Vincennes, or Bois de Vincennes, is the largest green space of the hundred or so parks and gardens in Paris, covering nearly a thousand hectares .. Located to the east of the city, in the XIIe arrondissement, it was originally the private hunting area of the kings, currently it has several buildings of various kinds that allow you to spend a pleasant day.

  5. Bois de Vincennes history. Bois de Vincennes and Bois de Boulogne were created in the second half of the 19th century by Baron Haussman and inspired by Hyde Park and Regent Park in London.

  6. In Paris: City site. … to the west and the Bois de Vincennes to the east. Moreover, during his reign a large area of land was laid out in promenades and garden squares. Under Mayor Jacques Chirac in the late 20th century, the municipal government initiated efforts to create new parks, and such projects continued… Read More.

  7. Owned by the Church, then by the kings of France until 1791, the history of the wood is closely linked to the château. It was long prized for its royal hunting grounds. It was only after the French Revolution that it was classified as national property.

  8. Jun 24, 2019 · The Bois de Vincennes, Paris's largest park, was originally fenced off as royal hunting grounds. Today, scattered among its trees and lawns are peaceful lakes, bird reserves, a farm and even a castle completed in 1370 under the reign of Charles V.

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