• Les Invalides In Paris Les Invalides and the dome over Napoleon's Tomb glowing in the evening sun. The star of the show, so to speak, is Napoleon himself.
  • Les Invalides - Musée de l'armee (Army Museum). Les Invalides is a stunning building with a 196-meter long (643 ft) front facade facing the Seine River.
  • For once the Sun King was thinking of others, as Les Invalides was designed to house old soldiers, many disabled and reduced in their old age to dire straits.
  • The enormous golden dome, the Baroque architectural style and ornately decorated features of Les Invalides are what makes it distinctive.
  • The Dôme des Invalides (originally Chapelle royale des Invalides) is a large former church in the centre of the Les Invalides complex, 107 metres (351 ft) high.
  • Site of the Dome Church and Napoleon's grave, Les Invalides has also long functioned as a military hospital.
  • Les Invalides, 17th-century complex in Paris built for disabled veterans, now also housing museums, a church, and the tombs of Napoleon I and others.
  • See photos and videos taken at this location and explore places nearby.
  • Dome of Les Invalides Cathédrale Saint-Louis-des-Invalides Musée de l'Armée Musée des Plans-Reliefs Musée de l'Ordre de la Libération.
  • The sprawling, grandiose state complex in Paris known collectively as "Les Invalides" isn’t routinely included on top-attractions lists, but it probably should be.