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  1. The French ruler Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) was born in Ajaccio on the Mediterranean island of Corsica. He crowned himself emperor in 1804 in what he perceived as the succession of Charlemagne (742-814).

  2. The wine became so famous that the two French kings Louis XI (1423-1483) and Louis XIV (1638-1715), as well as Joséphine de Beauharnais (the first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte) personally visited the vineyard.

  3. During the French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1815), wine-growing domains, most of which were owned by the state, were created from the property of the church, which had been secularised under the French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821). The aim of these "model/training vineyards" was, and in some cases still is, to spread modern winegrowing ...

  4. Real division under Napoleon. The French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) enacted a law after occupying this region in 1807, the negative effects of which can still be felt today. In order to prevent large-scale land ownership, he decreed the "real division", by which land ownership was to be divided equally among all descendants in the ...

  5. The winery is located in the municipality of Kasel (Ruwertal area) in the German wine-growing region of Mosel. The family winegrowing tradition was founded in 1670 by Peter Christian Nell, who was ennobled by Emperor Joseph I (1678-1711) in 1709 for his services. In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte visited...

  6. The winery is located in the municipality of Traben-Trarbach (Bernkastel area) in the German wine-growing region of Mosel.

  7. In 1847, Gevrey added the name Chambertin to the place name, which is the name of the most famous and best site on the Côte d'Or. A Chambertin red wine was also one of the favourite wines of Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821). This is why it is also called the wine of kings - king of wines.

  8. Napoleon (grape variety) Synonym for the grape varieties Bicane, Citronelle and Imperial Napoleon; see there.

  9. At the opening of the 47th VDP Wine Exchange in Mainz, Dr. Daniel Deckers, department head of the FAZ, received the silver honorary pin of the association "for his great commitment to reappraising German wine cultural history".

  10. From 1935 to 1938, the Romanesque state was restored and today Eberbach is one of the best-preserved medieval monastery complexes. In 1803, the estate was secularised in the course of the Napoleonic Wars and subsequently underwent several changes of ownership. Hessian state wineries

  11. The introduction of beer, the deteriorating climate in the wake of the Little Ice Age, phylloxera and the conquest of the Netherlands by Napoleon (1769-1821) virtually wiped out viticulture, but the last vineyard near Maastricht was not abandoned until 1946. It was then revived on a small scale at the end of the 1960s.

  12. Prices and information on 264,000 wines, which you can order directly in the online shops of our Premium Members.

  13. Emperor Napoleon (1769-1821) gave the estate to his marshal François-Étienne-Christophe Kellermann (1735-1820), the Duke of Valmy. The latter sold the entire harvest of the famous 1811 vintage to Gottlieb Mumm (1782-1852), thus founding today's G.H. von Mumm winery.

  14. Based on the saccharometer invented by Carl Joseph Napoleon Balling (1805-1868), Babo developed the Klosterneuburger Mostwaage (KMW) in 1861. This plummet is still the official instrument for determining must weight in Austria today. In 1869 he founded the first regularly published wine journal in Austria, "Weinlaube".

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