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Latest comment: 10 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
This page was created using text from Luxembourg Palace in which the hyphenated forms of the name, "Palais du Petit-Luxembourg" and simply "Petit-Luxembourg", were used. I switched to the non-hyphenated form because this is how it is given in the sources I consulted, including Ayer's 2004 book, the 2009 Michelin Green Guide Paris, and the website of the French Senate [1]. Kalnein's 1995 book uses the hyphenated Petit-Luxembourg in his running text, e.g., pp. 39 and 61, but not in the index (p. 292) or picture captions on pp. 40 and 62. I did not notice that any of these sources used the term Palais or Palace; Ayers specifically calls it an hôtel particulier. --Robert.Allen (talk) 16:27, 27 October 2014 (UTC)Reply