In New Orleans, the dish is called Bordelaise, even though there's not a drop of red Bordeaux in it. |
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Climatic factors were decisive in producing top quality wines from the Bordeaux varieties Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. |
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The vineyard is planted in Bordeaux red varietals with Sauvignon Blanc being sourced from Marlborough. |
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In Bordeaux, a double magnum is traditionally considered to be 3 liters, while a Jeroboam is 4.5 liters. |
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Although Bordeaux is best known for its red wines, the region produces excellent whites, particularly the sweet Sauternes. |
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Bordeaux whites, based on Sauvignon Blanc and sometimes blended with Semillon, are crisp and dry but usually not overtly herbaceous. |
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For the great sweet Bordeaux whites, you need Sauternes of similar status and you go to d' Yquem, where they don't do red. |
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Red Bordeaux is the world's best wine, and Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay are the best grapes. |
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Bordeaux is in south-west France and produces fine red wines that are often referred to as claret. |
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The style of winemaking is very much in the big and bold French Bordeaux type. |
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It goes without saying that Bordeaux is better known for reds but this wine certainly doesn't let the side down. |
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The variety has always seemed to have its origins in Bordeaux, where it has been enjoying a revival in popularity. |
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I enjoyed its rich, ripe, heavy oaky fruit with that classic touch of oaky austerity on the finish that Bordeaux is renowned for. |
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Built on an old railway line, the 35-mile track links Bordeaux with Sauveterre de Guyenne. |
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After tasting their wine, a smooth, dark ruby Bordeaux blend with a rich berry flavor, I'm convinced they're well on their way. |
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In Argentina, Malbec is often blended with other Bordeaux varietals such as Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. |
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Blessed with excellent terroir and fine chateaux, this could be the area that can push fine Bordeaux onto the table of more Americans. |
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In Bordeaux, barges must carry chunks of the fuselage up the Garonne River under an 18 th-century bridge that offers scant clearance. |
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Sauternes and Barsac are two other appellations for great white Bordeaux wine from Sauvignon blanc. |
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The walls had classic Bordeaux wallpaper, the table cloths looked like Indonesian batik. |
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This Cabernet Sauvignon from the Medoc wine-producing district of Bordeaux is very dry and thumpingly oaky, yet delicate. |
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The vines are Sauvignon and Semillon for the sweet wine and Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot for the AC Bordeaux. |
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Most of the growers who thin their crop grow Cabernet and Merlot and other Bordeaux varieties. |
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This means primarily top-flight red Bordeaux, Burgundies and wines from Italy and a few premium wines from Australia. |
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On November 26, French riot police broke through a picket line at a mint producing the new euro coins in Pessac, near Bordeaux. |
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The history of the first group of wines has been heavily influenced, nay hampered, by the commercial muscle of protectionist Bordeaux. |
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It directly marketed vintage Bordeaux and personalised champagne to the Irish market. |
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I actually have my own cellar at my house in Sussex where I am laying down lots of Bordeaux, among other things. |
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One Saturday after a match, Kevin and his wife invited me to their home and Kevin and I sat up drinking red Bordeaux. |
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Last year's heat produces the most puzzling vintage Bordeaux commentators can remember. |
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As it is, the Cabernet Franc grape is often seen as a poor relation of Cabernet Sauvignon, the Bordeaux king. |
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If you take out a bottle of great red Bordeaux, you have to go through the business of decanting it and serving it properly. |
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Dry Bordeaux white wine is a hugely overlooked phenomenon, but it is a star on the rise. |
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We can offer high rollers a glass of their favourite Bordeaux upon their arrival, or at any time. |
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I'll start out by saying that this is one of my all-round favourite Bordeaux, but the last two years I have scored it less well than usual. |
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I could have chosen a wonderful Bordeaux, but I didn't because this wine reminds me of so many memories. |
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It is because of this tannin that the classic combo of steak and young Bordeaux is such a winner. |
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It is a finely crafted red that's closer to Bordeaux than Coonawarra in style. |
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There was a bottle of Bordeaux on ice as well as a bottle of Champagne chilling down below. |
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The price is ridiculous, thanks to the deep unfashionability of dry Bordeaux white wine. |
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Its wines have become the reference points for Bordeaux and all Cabernet-based reds. |
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The vast majority of Bordeaux and Burgundy is held by small farmers in small plots. |
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This great classic is once again one of your favourite Bordeaux, and wine lovers are right in showing interest. |
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One of the overlooked dormant season fungicide spray materials is Bordeaux Mixture. |
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Known as bouillie bordelaise in France, a Bordeaux mixture is a compound of copper sulfate, slaked lime, salt, and water. |
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Bordeaux mixture was originally used in France in the 1860s to control grape diseases. |
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In preparing Bordeaux mixture, the copper sulphate is dissolved in half the required amount of water in a wooden or plastic vessel. |
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To control brown rot on apricots, spray with a Bordeaux mixture or other fungicide containing copper. |
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This book covers the discovery and development of the Bordeaux mixture by Pierre Marie Alexis Millardet. |
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During the fall, it is wise to dust the seedlings, maybe two or three times before winter sets in, with Bordeaux mixture. |
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Spraying of 1 per cent Bordeaux mixture has been recommended for controlling the same. |
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A mixture or copper sulfate and hydrated lime, Bordeaux mix can be applied as a wettable powder or dust to control disease. |
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There's a Riesling glass, a Bordeaux glass, a Burgundy glass, a Pinotage glass. |
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In Bordeaux, winemakers are simply trying to make the best grand vin, or top wine, and most will ruthlessly demote wines as they see fit. |
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The following is my Bordeaux appellation by appellation report of the red wines of the vintage. |
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Bordeaux merchant houses must start cutting deals not only with their Burgundian brothers but with New World partners. |
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The oenological and viticultural faculties of the universities of Bordeaux and Montpellier have long enjoyed international prestige. |
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For example, the top thirty chateaux in Bordeaux only produce half a million cases of wine in any one year. |
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On 13 June Paris was declared an open city, as the French government fled to Bordeaux. |
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The disgraced Capt. Rolf Mueller is blackmailed by his superiors into helming a merchant ship packed with rubber cargo from Japan to Bordeaux. |
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In 1973, he launched Sommeliers, a series of wine glasses that were custom-made for Bordeaux, Burgundy, Chablis, and so on. |
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Ever the scientist, Magoon discovered that the soil was perfect for Bordeaux varietals such as Chardonnay and Petite Syrah. |
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In the summer of 2000, she planned a two-week trip through Bordeaux, Burgundy and Beaujolais to see historic chateaux. |
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Later, barrels in Bordeaux were routinely sterilised by having sulphur candles burned in them. |
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By the 18th century sulfur candles were regularly used to sterilize barrels used in Bordeaux. |
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This is a figure higher than France's Bordeaux or Italy's Chianti can command so they're obviously doing something very right. |
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Accountants reckon that while most of us know the price of turbot or fillet steak, few of us know the price of an obscure Bordeaux claret. |
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The rare but flavoursome petit verdot grape is becoming fashionable in Bordeaux where it is used to give top clarets the edge. |
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Massive submarine pens were built near Bordeaux and the impact they had can be seen from the following figures. |
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Scottish couples are ditching such wedding list staples as toasters, towels and fish kettles for a bottle or 12 of vintage Bordeaux or champagne. |
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However, I'm not sure if I got value for money and can't help remembering that there were no flies on me in that modest Bordeaux bistro. |
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As a young man Montaigne practised law in Bordeaux and also resided frequently at court. |
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The Bordeaux fans stayed behind to give the Celtic supporters a round of applause, acknowledging their good humour. |
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Cult Cabernets ruled, along with first growth Bordeaux and grand cru Burgundy. |
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The most important of these was exemption from the Grand Coutume, the export tax imposed on ships sailing from Bordeaux. |
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Now, it's almost routine to find single malts matured in used casks which once held cognac, fino sherry, Madeira, Malaga, Bordeaux and other wines and spirits. |
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Copper oxychloride, cupric hydroxide and Bordeaux mixture are used to control a range of fungus diseases including mildews, anthracnose and leaf spots. |
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The pheasant calls for Pommard, while songbirds and hare lend themselves to aged Bordeaux or a light Gevrey. |
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Cognac, champagne, Bordeaux, and ouzo are among the Western European product denominations which have already been protected by the European Union. |
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It's refreshing to see sommeliers who would be just as comfortable shotgunning beers in a frat house as evaluating high-end Bordeaux at a French chateau. |
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Mr Rutter said that in 2006 the company's business plan was to launch services to Jersey, north-east Scotland and the French areas of Bordeaux, Bergerac and Brittany. |
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While most Sauvignon Blanc wines from Bordeaux are consumed within a few years of the vintage, the dry and sweet wines from the great chateaux can age for decades. |
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The auberge is on a hillside overlooking the valley towards Bordeaux. |
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Is the Bordeaux area too grand to produce a popular, everyday pink wine? |
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Some vineyards affected by copper toxicity in the Bordeaux area are much reduced in vigour, but the problem can be overcome by adding lime to the soil. |
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After France's loss of her colonial empire the merchants of Nantes and Bordeaux sank their capital in the arable land and vineyards of the hinterland. |
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Mondavi also realized the value of coaxing trophy names from Bordeaux into opening wineries in Napa. |
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Both produce some wines good enough to challenge the well-bred conceits of wine makers in Burgundy and Bordeaux. |
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Perhaps thanks to the surf and turf and the stellar Bordeaux and Sauvignon Blanc, there were no lost tempers. |
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Bordeaux merchants turned to Rioja, importing the wines and encouraging the bodegas to adopt classic Bordeaux techniques such as de-stemming of grapes and barrel ageing. |
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Wine shops sell Bordeaux wine primeurs the spring after the harvest. |
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Studies of old vineyard soils in Bordeaux have shown that fertility can be restored by heavy applications of organic matter, lime, phosphorus, and potassium. |
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Copper based fungicides such as Bordeaux mixture can be used as a treatment for these, although the symptoms disappear when environmental conditions change. |
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All pears are lime-sulphur-shy but all are tolerant of Bordeaux mixture, so use this to spray them early in May and again after blossom set, early in June. |
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Its fame and wealth predated the 1855 classification of Bordeaux wines, but it was placed alongside the other first class growths in that classification. |
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The Agenais was an important wine-growing area and its cession further strengthened the rapidly developing commercial links between Bordeaux and London. |
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The Royal Horticultural Society suggests spraying with Bordeaux mixture, an organic mix of copper sulphate and slaked lime which is dissolved to make a fungicidal spray. |
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The official, a career diplomat who speaks fluent French and likes to vacation in Italy, sat back and took an appreciative sip from his glass of good red wine from Bordeaux. |
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Bordeaux Mixture provides a broad spectrum of protective disease control by preventing or inhibiting the disease before the fungi or bacteria enter the plant. |
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While Bordeaux wines rely heavily on Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot grapes, Gaillac uses the unusual brancol and dura, as well as the better known Syrah and Merlot varieties. |
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Some prominent inorganic pesticides include Bordeaux mixture, a complex fungicide with several copper-based active ingredients, used for fruit and vegetable crops. |
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The hotel ballroom was also full of famous bottles from the great chateaux of Bordeaux and these two California wines held their own without a problem. |
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The walls are painted a solemn Bordeaux hue to let the garments resonate all the more boldly. |
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Its rise to fame dates only from the middle of the 19th century when the river Baise was canalized and the Armagnacais gained direct access to Bordeaux for the first time. |
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Malbec is a blending grape in France and Australia, and is particularly blended with Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc in Bordeaux or Bordeaux blend wines. |
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For meat and spuds, a good claret is your best choice. Cabernets and Merlots from California and hearty Shiraz from Australia are far better options than over-priced Bordeaux. |
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It is a component of the dry white graves and the sweet sauternes of the Bordeaux region as well as being the grape of Sancerre and Pouilly in the Upper Loire Valley. |
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Only the rich had access to the very finest clarets of Bordeaux. |
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The main provincial towns and cities experiencing the Massacre were Aix, Bordeaux, Bourges, Lyons, Meaux, Orleans, Rouen, Toulouse, and Troyes. |
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The Gaulish version is attested in inscriptions as Boudiga in Bordeaux, Boudica in Lusitania, and Bodicca in Algeria. |
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The only Plantagenet known to have died from the Black Death was Edward III's daughter Joan in Bordeaux. |
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Soon after this battle, in 732, the Moors raided Vasconia and Aquitaine as far north as Poitiers and defeated Odo twice near Bordeaux. |
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When Charles died in 1380, only Calais, Bordeaux and Bayonne were left to the English. |
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Talbot had been persuaded to engage the French army at Castillon near Bordeaux. |
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By November 1793, the revolts in Normandy, Bordeaux and Lyon were overcome, in December also that in Toulon. |
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She had long ago accepted his disapproval, but she had perfect trust in him and his leechcraft as she had had at Hugh's bedside in Bordeaux. |
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The Alberich who aids Ortnit is paralleled by the French Auberon, who aids Huon de Bordeaux and whose name derives from Alberich. |
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In December 1942 he led a small commando raid against Axis shipping in Bordeaux. |
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Valois took the Agenais and then advanced further and cut off the main city of Bordeaux. |
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In 2009 he married Elizabeth Gibson, senior lecturer in law at the universities of Tours and Bordeaux. |
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As of February 2017, the city council is also in talks to twin with Bordeaux, Saint Petersburg and Miami. |
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Upon landing in Bordeaux, they set off on a walking tour with their art equipment in hand, intending to reach Rome. |
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Other major urban centres include Marseille, Lyon, Lille, Nice, Toulouse and Bordeaux. |
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On 17 June 1940, a plane arrived in Jersey from Bordeaux evacuating Brigade General Charles de Gaulle from France. |
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Bayonne is in the Diocese of Bayonne, Lescar and Oloron, with a Suffragan bishop since 2002 under the Archdiocese of Bordeaux. |
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Abdul Rahman next proceeded through Gascony all the way to Bordeaux, capturing the city. |
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Odo engaged Abdul Rahman on the Garonne River at the Battle of Bordeaux, but was defeated. |
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In the midst of the fighting a rumour went through the Umayyad army that Frankish scouts threatened the booty that they had taken from Bordeaux. |
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Charles went to war, leading an army to Bordeaux, where he set up a fort at Fronsac. |
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Two dukes of Gascony, Seguin II and William I, died defending Bordeaux from Viking assaults. |
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Via Aquitania reached from Narbonne, where it connected to the Via Domitia, to the Atlantic Ocean through Toulouse to Bordeaux. |
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In 1753-4, the Parlements of Aix, Bordeaux, Rennes and Rouen remonstrated in support of the exiled Paris institution. |
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The great sweet wines of Bordeaux including Sauternes and Barsac account for less than 1pc of the total production of the Bordeaux region. |
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But there are many Sauternes and other Bordeaux varietals like Barsac that are affordable and highly drinkable. |
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That customer who loves pungent Roquefort will appreciate the marriage partner of a Barsac or Sauternes from Bordeaux. |
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Spray peaches, nectarines and almonds again with a copper-based solution such as Bordeaux Mixture or Murphy Traditional Copper. |
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The only sure way of avoiding potato blight is to routinely spray plants with Bordeaux mixture or Dithane before they become affected. |
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I always water them in with a copper-based fungicide such as Cheshunt Compound, Traditional Copper or Bordeaux Mixture. |
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Instead of waiting for the arrival of blight, spray against it with Bordeaux mixture in July and then once a fortnight until September. |
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The traveling doctor Dulcamara takes advantage of Nemorino's naivety and sells him a bottle of Bordeaux wine claiming that it is a love potion. |
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As Stefan prepared for his Bar Mitsvah in Vienna his uncle and aunt were buried quietly in Bordeaux. |
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In 1932 he starred in Richard of Bordeaux by Elizabeth MacKintosh. |
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Despite its reputation as being a rainy city, London receives less precipitation in a year than Rome, Bordeaux, Toulouse, Naples, Sydney and New York. |
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Sterling's dubieties as to continuing at Bordeaux were quickly decided. |
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Reports are coming to hand from a very large number of districts as to the success which has attended the use of the Bordeaux mixture as a preventive of potato disease. |
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Ridge was one of the first wineries to take Zinfandel seriously, keeping yields low and vinifying in the Bordeaux manner, with extended barrel-ageing. |
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Bordeaux was 23 when she was last seen on the early morning of April 14, 2012, at Froggy Bottoms bar in Fayetteville, where she had gone to sing karaoke. |
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Greene's play prompted a less successful sequel John of Bordeaux and was recast as a children's story for James Baldwin's 1905 Thirty More Famous Stories Retold. |
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The French reorganised the superior numbers of their feudal levies into a modern professional army and retook Paris, Rouen, Bordeaux and Normandy. |
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The effort failed, and with the Treaty of Bruges in 1375, the great English possessions in France were reduced to only the coastal towns of Calais, Bordeaux, and Bayonne. |
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After Cabernet and Syrah, the next best selling red wine varietals were Bordeaux blends, Pinot Noir, Merlot, Rhone red blends, Malbec and Sangiovese. |
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Continuity and replacement guard, classified towers IGH, Bergenia residences, 14 rue Maryse Bastie and Feijoa, 2 rue Camille Claudel in the district of Grand Parc Bordeaux. |
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They attacked German ships in Bordeaux harbour using limpet mines in Operation Frankton, which Winston Churchill claimed shortened the war by six months. |
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Denis Cohen, 66, graduated from the Higher National School of Electronics and Radioelectricity of Bordeaux and holds a degree in mathematics and physics. |
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In July 1795, after graduation, Lowell set out on a merchant ship carrying cargo to various places including Basque Country in Spain and Bordeaux, France. |
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During my time in Bordeaux, the paillasse cover was never changed. |
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This is because Day's letter implies that the coastline explored in 1497 lay between the latitudes of the Bordeaux River in France and Dursey Head in southern Ireland. |
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On the approach of cholera in 1831 some new lazarets were set up at western ports, notably a very extensive establishment near Bordeaux, afterwards turned to another use. |
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