-
MenuBack
-
Wine Books
-
-
Librairie du vin
- Wine from A to Z
- Food & wine pairings
- Art & architecture
- Beautiful books
- Beers
- Cocktails & Spirits
- Management of your cellar
- Buying Guides
- Glossaries & dictionaries
- Wine tourism
- Tasting
- Antiquarian books
- Wine videos
- Wines & history
- Wine & health
- Natural Wines
- Comics & mangas about wine
- Wine Reviews
- Whisky
-
-
-
Le vin par région
- Corsican wines
- Jura wines
- Loire wines
- Other regions of France
- The wines of Alsace
- The wines of America
- The wines of Bordeaux
- The wines of Burgundy
- The wines of Champagne
- The wines of France
- The wines of Italy
- The wines of Languedoc
- The wines of Oceania
- The wines of Provence
- The wines of Spain
- The wines of the Rhône
- The wines of the Sud-Ouest
- The wines of the world
- Wines from the United Kingdom
- Wines of Africa
- Wines of Portugal
-
-
-
Littérature & essais
-
Sélection Spéciale
-
-
-
WINES MAPS
-
-
Aromas
-
-
Corkscrews
-
-
Glasses
-
-
Decanters
-
-
WINE ACCESSORIES
-
-
WINES
-
- News
Champagne: How the World's Most Glamorous Wine Triumphed Over War and Hard Times | Kladstrup
- Livre en langue etrangère -
1 Last items in stock- Author
- "Kladstrup" is a French surname.
- Language
- English 🇬🇧
Visa, MasterCard, Amex, Paypal or 3 times, interest-free with Scalapay
0.01€ from 35€ of purchase in France and from 99€ throughout Europe
Delivery in France and around the world at home, at office or in a pickup point
Description
By Don & Petie Kladstrup From the time of Attila the Hun to the Germans of World War II, waves of invaders have tried to conquer the verdant region of Champagne in northern France. Yet this strife-torn land is also the birthplace of the world's favorite wine: champagne. In this engrossing history, Don and Petie Kladstrup show how this sparkling wine, born of bloodshed, became a symbol of glamour, good times, and celebration. It's a story filled with larger-than-life characters: Dom Pérignon, the father of champagne, who, contrary to popular belief, worked his entire life to keep bubbles out of champagne; the Sun King, Louis XIV, who rarely drank anything but; and Napoleon, who, in trying to conquer the world, introduced it to champagne. Then there were the generations of local vintners who struggled to keep their houses running. Claude Moët hauled his bottles to Versailles and gave Madame de Pompadour her first taste of bubbly, prompting her memorable quote, "Champagne is the only wine that lets a woman remain beautiful after she has drunk it." There was also Charles-Camille Heidsieck, known as "Champagne Charlie," who popularized champagne in America and ended up being imprisoned as a spy during the Civil War. World War I would be Champagne's greatest test of all, a four-year nightmare in which nearly everything the Champenois had worked and fought for was destroyed "in a rain of iron and fire." German bombardment drove thousands of people underground to seek refuge in the huge cellars of the champagne houses, where among the bottles you would find schools, hospitals, shops, municipal offices, and troops. Amazingly, grapes continued to be harvested even as bombs fell, and the wartime vintages are considered to be among the finest ever made. An unforgettable history, Champagne will forever change how you look at a glass of bubbly. ED: HarperCollins (2005), 13x20 cm, 286 pages, paperback
Details
Data sheet
- Author
- "Kladstrup" is a French surname.
- Language
- English 🇬🇧
- Date of publication
- 30/12/1899