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  1. Official website of the Prince’s Palace of Monaco. News of the princely family: press releases, speeches, videos, photos... Discover the history of the Palace and the Grimaldi family.

  2. The Prince's Palace of Monaco is the official residence of the Prince of Monaco. Built in 1191 as a Genoese fortress, during its long and often dramatic history it has been bombarded and besieged by many foreign powers. Since the end of the 13th century, it has been the stronghold and home of the Grimaldi family who first captured it in 1297. The Grimaldi ruled the area first as feudal lords ...

  3. Open from Tuesday April 2nd to Tuesday October 15th 2019, 10 am to 6 pm (last entry at 5.30 pm); 1 July to 31 August: 10 am to 7 pm (last entry 6.30 pm) Closed : Formula 1 Grand Prix weekend (25 & 26 May 2019) , and Saturday June 1st 2019. On Friday July 27th 2019, Palace closed at 4pm. ADMISSION: Adults: €8. Children (aged 6–16), Students ...

  4. 19 de set. de 2022 · Standing on a rocky promontory ( Le Rocher ), the Prince’s Palace of Monaco is the official residence of the ruling Prince of Monaco. The castle has been the home of the Grimaldi dynasty since the end of the 13th century. The Palais de Monaco occupies a unique and spectacular geological site, facing the Mediterranean Sea at the foot of the Alps.

  5. Early life. Rainier was born at Prince's Palace in Monaco, the first native-born prince since Honoré IV in 1758. Rainier's mother, Charlotte, was the only child of Louis II, Prince of Monaco, and his lover, Marie Juliette Louvet; she was legitimised through formal adoption and subsequently named heiress presumptive to the throne of Monaco.

  6. The sovereign prince ( French: prince de Monaco) is the monarch and head of state of the Principality of Monaco. All reigning princes and princesses have taken the name of the House of Grimaldi. When Prince Rainier III died in 2005, he was Europe's longest reigning monarch. [1] The Grimaldi family, which has ruled Monaco for eight centuries, [2 ...

  7. Prince Louis II died in 1949 in the Prince's Palace and is buried at the Saint Nicholas Cathedral in Monte Carlo, Monaco. His daughter, Charlotte, had ceded her succession rights to her son, Rainier, in 1944, at which time he became hereditary prince. [1] Thus, when Louis II died five years later, he was succeeded by his grandson, Rainier III.