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  1. Napoleon wine. Name (also comet wine) for the legendary 1811 vintage, because the French Emperor Napoleon (1769-1821) was at the height of his fame at the time.

  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. The French chemist Jean-Antoine Claude Chaptal, Comte de Chanteloup (1756-1832) became Minister of the Interior and Agriculture under Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821).

  4. 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 event of inheritance.

  5. 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).

  6. 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 event of inheritance.

  7. In 1803, the monastery property was secularised under the French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821). The Duke of Nassau-Usingen became the new owner, followed by the Kingdom of Prussia from 1866 and the State of Hesse from 1946.

  8. The name is derived from the famous diamond (140.5 carats) which was on the crown of Louis XV (1710-1774) at his coronation in 1722 and which was later frequently worn by Marie-Antoinette (1755-1793). It also adorned the sword pommel of Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), and today the diamond can be found in the Louvre in Paris.

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

  10. 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.

  11. Liebfrauenstift-Kirchenstück. Historical single vineyard in Worms (Wonnegau area) in the German wine-growing region of Rheinhessen. The famous vineyard was once part of the ecclesiastical property of the Capuchin monastery Liebfrauen-Stiftskirche.

  12. The wine merchant Peter Joseph Valckenberg (1764-1837) bought the historic vineyards of the famous single vineyard Liebfrauenstift-Kirchenstück in Worms (Rheinhessen) in the course of the Napoleonic secularisation in 1808.

  13. Synonym for the grape varieties Alphonse Lavallée and Imperial Napoleon (also Almeria Negre); see there.

  14. From 15 May to 15 November 1855, the Universal Exhibition was held in Paris under the aegis of Napoleon III (1808-1873). The most important exhibition venue was temporarily erected between the Champs-Élysées and the Seine.

  15. Samalens. The Armagnac House "Armagnac Samalens S.A." in Laujuzan (Gers) was founded in 1882 by Jean Samalens. The Armagnacs are produced in the qualities VSOP with seven to eight years maturation, Napoleon (10 to 12 years), Rare (over 11 years) and Reserve Imperial XO (10 to 15 years).

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