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Prinz-Carl-Palais

Bavaria building and structure stubsBuildings and structures in MunichGerman castle stubsMaxvorstadtNeoclassical architecture in Munich
Palace stubsPalaces in BavariaTourist attractions in Munich
Prinz Carl Palais 3550
Prinz Carl Palais 3550

The Prinz Carl Palais in Munich is a mansion built in the style of early Neoclassicism in 1804–1806. It was also known as the Palais Salabert and the Palais Royal, after its former owners. The Prinz-Carl-Palais was planned in 1803 by the young architect Karl von Fischer for Abbé Pierre de Salabert, a former teacher of King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria. On the death of the Abbé Salabert in 1807, Maximilian I Joseph acquired the building. After his death in 1825, his son, Ludwig I, gave the building to his brother Prince Carl. He ordered Jean-Baptiste Métevier and Anton Schwanthaler to decorate the rooms. After Carl's death the Palais served as Diplomatic mission for Austria-Hungary from 1876 onwards before it became a residence for the Bavarian Prime Ministers in 1924.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Prinz-Carl-Palais (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Prinz-Carl-Palais
Altstadtringtunnel, Munich Maxvorstadt

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N 48.144166666667 ° E 11.583055555556 °
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Prinz-Carl-Palais

Altstadtringtunnel
80539 Munich, Maxvorstadt
Bavaria, Germany
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Prinz Carl Palais 3550
Prinz Carl Palais 3550
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