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This article refers to residences. For other uses of the word 'palace', see The Palace .


A palace is (or was) the home of a Head Of State or other high-ranking public figure. Many palaces have been transformed for other uses, such as Parliament s or Museum s. The word is also sometimes used to describe a lavish public building which does not house a public figure; this use is intended to convey that the building is a "people's palace", where a sort of civic consciousness resides.

The word "palace" comes from the name of one of the Seven Hills Of Rome , the Palatine Hill . The original 'palaces' on the Palatine Hill were the seat of the imperial power, while the ''capitol'' on the Capitoline Hill was the seat of the senate and the religious nucleus of Rome. Long after the city grew to the seven hills the Palatine remained a desirable residential area. Augustus Caesar lived there in a purposely modest house only set apart from his neighbors by the two laurel trees planted to flank the front door as a sign of triumph granted by the Senate. His descendants, especially Nero, with his " Golden House " enlarged the house and grounds over and over until it took up the hill top. The word ''Palatium'' came to mean the residence of the emperor rather than the neighborhood on top of the hill.

'' was the seat of the Papal Curia and the Pope at Avignon.]]
"Palace" meaning "government" can be recognized in a remark of '', V.xvii). At the same time Charlemagne was consciously reviving the Roman expression in his "palace" at Aachen , of which only his chapel remains. In the 9th Century the "palace" indicated the housing of the government too, and the constantly-travelling Charlemagne built fourteen. In the early Middle Ages, the ''Palas'' remained the seat of government in some German cities. In the Holy Roman Empire the powerful independent Electors came to be housed in palaces (''Paläste'') This has been used as evidence that power was widely distributed in the Empire, as in more centralized monarchies, only one supreme monarch would be allowed to call their home a ''palace''.

In France there has been a clear distinction between a Château and a ''palais''. The palace has always been urban, like the '' Palais De La Cité '' in Paris (''above''), which was the royal palace of France and is now the supreme court of justice of France, or the palace of the Pope s at Avignon (''illustration, left'').

The château, by contrast, has always been in rural settings, supported by its Demesne , even when it was no longer actually fortified. Speakers of English think of the " Palace Of Versailles " because it was the residence of the king of France, and the king was the source of power, though the building has always remained the ''Château de Versailles'' for the French, and the seat of government under the '' Ancien Regime '' remained the Palais du Louvre . The Louvre had begun as a fortified ''Château du Louvre'' on the edge of Paris, but as the seat of government and shorn of its fortified architecture and then completely surrounded by the city, it developed into the ''Palais du Louvre''.

In Italy, where localized regimes lasted to the 19th century, many a small former capital displays its ''Palazzo Ducale,'' the seat of government. In Florence and other strong Communal Governments , the seat of government was the '' Palazzo Della Signoria '' until in Florence the Medici were made Grand Dukes of Tuscany. Then, when the power center shifted to their residence in Palazzo Pitti , the old center of power began to be called the ''Palazzo Vecchio''.

But indeed, in some Italian cities, it is not uncommon to find many "palaces," including some comparatively humble mansions, each built by one of the principal noble families. Each family's ''palazzo'' was a hive that contained all the family members, though it might not always show a grand architectural public front. In the 20th century ''palazzo'' in Italian came to apply to any large fine apartment building.

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In England, by tacit agreement, there have been no "palaces" other than those used as official residences by royalty and certain Bishop s. Thus the Palace Of Beaulieu gained its name precisely when Thomas Boleyn sold it to Henry VIII in 1517; previously it had been known as Walkfares. But like several other palaces, the name stuck even once the royal connection ended. Although The Palace Of Blenheim (''illustration, left'') was never a royal residence, the name was part of the extraordinary honor when the house was given by a grateful nation to a great general. (Along with several royal and Episcopal palaces in the countryside, Blenheim does demonstrate that "palace" has no specific urban connotations in English.)

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As on the continent, these royal and episcopal palaces were not merely residences; the clerks who administered the realm or the diocese labored there as well. (To this day many bishops' palaces house both their family apartments and their official offices.) However, unlike the "Palais du Justice" which is often encountered in the French-speaking world, modern British public administration buildings are never called "palaces"; although the formal name for the "Houses of Parliament " is the Palace Of Westminster , this reflects Westminster's former role as a royal residence and center of administration.

In more recent years, the word has been used in a more informal sense for other large, impressive buildings, such as The Crystal Palace of 1851 (an immensely large, glazed hall erected for the Great Exhibition ) and modern arenas-cum-convention centres like Alexandra Palace (which is no more a palace than Madison Square Garden is a garden).

:''For the Household staff of palaces, see Great House .


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