The revolutionaries stormed the palace at Tuileries and took King Louis XVI captive, after which a new Legislative Assembly declared a suspension of the monarchy.
The king promised to move the court from Versailles to Paris.
Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were moved to the Palace of Tuileries in 1791.
He had several. In the days before proper sanitation, houses got smelly quite quickly, so the court would move on to another palace while the last one was cleaned. Much of the furniture would move, too. In Paris, the King lived in the Palais des Tuileries, part of the Louvre; around Paris there were royal residences at St. Cloud, Marly, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Rambouillet, Marly, Fontainebleau and Sceaux. However, I think the answer you are groping for is VERSAILLES, the vast palace which Louis XIV had built to house himself and the entire court outside Paris. Even here, there was provision for the Royal entourage to move around; the King could move into the Trianon while the Royal Apartments were refurbished.
Louis was officially arrested on 13 August 1792 and sent to the Temple, an ancient Paris fortress used as a prison. On 21 September, 1792 the National Convention declared France to be a republic and abolished the monarchy. He was arrested because he tried to flee the country with his family and requested the help of other European monarchs to overcome this revolution and restore the monarchy in France. This was seen as treason, and this is what he was tried for.
Because he wanted his meals served with French flies
The revolutionaries stormed the palace at Tuileries and took King Louis XVI captive, after which a new Legislative Assembly declared a suspension of the monarchy.
permission, french passport, visa
The British wanted to move west because they wanted to use the land that they won from the French after the French and Indian War.
Because the French wanted to leave the warfare and Famine in their country.
For a number of months the French had been taking severe losses at Verdun - to the east of Paris. To relieve the French, the Allied High Command decided to attack the Germans to the north of Verdun therefore requiring the Germans to move some of their men away from the Verdun battlefield thus relieving the French. Basically, the French wanted the Germans to get off their land.
Because the colonists wanted to move west into French and Indian land.
It was a protest about the high price of bread and they demanded that the King move his residence to Paris where he would be able to personally view the plight of his people.
When the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen was drawn up by the people of the third state, women were left out. Olympe De Gourges later rewrote it and replaced the word "man" with "woman". Women did participate in the rebellion against the monarchy. For example, the marched to Versailles demanding bread and forcing the royal family to move to Paris..
The March of Versailles was a significant event during the French Revolution when thousands of working-class women marched to Versailles to demand bread and protest against the monarchy. The march highlighted the growing discontent among the French populace over economic hardship and inequality, leading to the royal family being forced to move from Versailles to Paris. It symbolized the power of popular uprising and helped pave the way for future revolutionary actions during the French Revolution.
To escape religious persecution. They wanted freedom from the overbearing reign of the monarchy in England.
If they already live under a monarchy or constitutional monarchy, they don't have to do anything. In the US, they do without; it is not likely that a move toward establishing a US monarchy would go very far. In most cases in history, countries have move away from and not toward monarchies to handle governmental needs.