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Pages in category "Royal residences in Portugal" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total. ... Project for the Royal Palace in Campo de Ourique;
The royal palaces in the Kingdom of Sweden are the following: The Royal Palace in Stockholm; Drottningholm Palace; Chinese Pavilion at Drottningholm; Gripsholm Castle, Mariefred; Gustav III's Pavilion; Haga Palace; Rosendal Palace; Rosersberg Palace; Strömsholm Palace; Tullgarn Palace; Ulriksdal Palace; The royal palaces are the property of ...
Queluz National Palace. Ajuda National Palace – former royal palace [1] Beau-Séjour Palace; Belém Palace – former royal palace; seat of the president of Portugal [2] Bemposta Palace – former royal palace; Burnay Palace; Correio-Mor Palace – former seat of the High-Couriers of the Kingdom; Estaus Palace; Feu Guião Palace; Galveias Palace
Swedish royal family photos from 1940s to now chronicle the lives of King Carl XVI Gustaf, Queen Silvia, Princess Victoria, Princess Madeleine, Prince Carl Philip, and more. The Swedish royal ...
Here, see all the best photos of the Swedish royal family—and their sparkling jewels: Crown Princess Victoria. Crown Princess Victoria was all smiles as she took in the Nobel Prize ceremony.
Palace of the Counts of Azambuja; Palace of the Counts of Redondo; Palace of the Dukes of Bragança (Lisbon) Palace of the Dukes of Palmela; Palace of the Marquises of Fronteira; Palacete de São Bento; Palacete Mayer; Palácio Belmonte; Panaca Palace; Penafiel Palace; Pestana Palace; Pimenta Palace; Project for the Royal Palace in Campo de Ourique
The palace chapel, designed by José Troni and Thomas F. Hickey.. In 1803, the Prince-Regent, (the future King John VI) lived at Bemposta. [1] [3] Even after the return of the royal family, in 1821, John returned to Bemposta, and with the intent of making the residence more habitable, began various renovations in 1822, 1824 and 1825, principally in the rooms behind the chapel and on the floor ...
Following the destruction of the Palace of Ajuda by fire in 1794, Queluz Palace became the official residence of the Portuguese Prince Regent John, and his family, and remained so until the royal family fled to the Portuguese colony of Brazil, following the French invasion of Portugal (1807). [2] Work on the palace began in 1747 under ...