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                                         Designed 
                                        in 1755, this octagonal courtyard lies 
                                        between the Champs-Élysées 
                                        to the west and the Tuileries Gardens 
                                        to the east. Originally named Place Louis 
                                        XV to honor the then king, it was filled 
                                        with statues and fountains to make it 
                                        a place of beauty and peace in the middle 
                                        of Paris. Two buildings were added at 
                                        the north end, and they were to serve 
                                        as governmental offices, but one of them 
                                        was eventually made into the Hôtel 
                                        de Crillon. During the French Revolution the statue 
                                        of King Louis XV was torn down and the 
                                        area renamed "Place de la Révolution". 
                                        Over 1300 heads were taken as the nobility 
                                        and members of the bourgeoisie were slaughtered 
                                        one by one using a guillotine erected 
                                        at the site. These heads included the 
                                        head of King Louis XVI and the head of 
                                        Marie Antoinette. Also reported to be 
                                        present were Madame du Barry, Danton, 
                                        Lavoisier, and Robespierre.
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        As 
                                        the revolution subsided it was renamed 
                                        “Place de la Concorde” (French 
                                        for concord) and in 1830 the name was 
                                        made official. It is hard to imagine the 
                                        bloody past of this magnificent space 
                                        just by looking at it. Still present is 
                                        the giant Egyptian obelisk decorated with 
                                        hieroglyphics exalting the reign of the 
                                        pharaoh Ramses II. Egypt presented the 
                                        3,300-year-old Luxor Obelisk to France 
                                        in 1836, and King Louis-Philippe had it 
                                        placed in the centre of Place de la Concorde. 
                                        The red granite column rises 23 metres 
                                        high, including the base, and weighs over 
                                        250 tonnes. Missing its original cap, 
                                        believed stolen in the 6th century BC, 
                                        in 1998 the government of France added 
                                        a gold-leafed pyramid to the top of the 
                                        obelisk.
 
                                           
                                            | Place 
                                                De La Concorde Travel Links |   
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