Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Saint-Pierre Doré (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃ pjɛʁ dɔʁe]) is a white French wine grape variety grown primarily around the Saint-Pourçain AOC in the Auvergne region of Central France. While the grape has a long history in the region of being very productive and producing high yields , its plantings have been steadily declining over the ...
This Pas-de-Calais geographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Lellouche is a North-African surname; a variant form of Lellouch, Lelouch, Alloush, Allouch and Allouche.It is derived from the early Afroasiatic-Semitic family, where it is seen in the Berber and Arabian Peninsula Arabic cultures as el allouch (alush), meaning "the lamb".
Saint-Pierre (surname), including a list of people with the name Saint-Pierre or variants; Saint Pierre (grape), or Saint-Pierre Doré; John Dory, or Saint-Pierre, a fish; Canal de Saint-Pierre, in Toulousse, France; Château Saint-Pierre, a winery in the Bordeaux region of France; Battle of Saint-Pierre, in 1776, near Quebec City, Canada
Pouligny-Saint-Pierre is a French goats'-milk cheese made in the Indre department of central France.Its name is derived from the commune of Pouligny-Saint-Pierre in the Indre department where it was first made in the 18th century.
Bernardin de Saint-Pierre maintained that a carnivorous animal in devouring its prey alive committed a sin against the laws of its own nature." [5] Alexander von Humboldt, next to Charles Darwin the best known naturalist of the nineteenth century, belonged to the admirers of Bernardin de Saint-Pierre and cherished the novel Paul et Virginie. [6]
A white Crozes-Hermitage produced from 100% Marsanne. As is the case for most French AOC wines, the variety is not mentioned on the front label.. The grape most likely originated in the Northern Rhône region where it is widely planted today, more precisely in the village and abbey of Marsanne (Drôme).
Eustache de Saint Pierre, by Jean-Simon Berthélemy. Eustache de Saint Pierre is the best-known figure of the group of six known as The Burghers of Calais, the first to volunteer and surrender, wearing "a shirt and a rope around his neck" to the King of England at that time, Edward III, to save the people of Calais (August 1347).