Champagne
0 sources
Champagne
Summary
Champagne is a wine-producing region[1]. Champagne ranks in the top 5% of wine_producing_region entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (265 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Champagne is located in Marne[3].
- Champagne is located in Aube[4].
- Champagne is located in Aisne[5].
- Champagne is located in Haute-Marne[6].
- Champagne is located in Seine-et-Marne[7].
- Champagne is in the country of France[8].
- Champagne's image is recorded as Vignobles champagne.svg[9].
- Champagne's instance of is recorded as wine-producing region[10].
- Champagne's part of is recorded as French viticultural region[11].
- Champagne's Commons category is recorded as Vineyards of Champagne[12].
- Champagne's has part is recorded as Côte des Blancs[13].
- Champagne's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 49, 'lon': 4}[14].
- Champagne's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0f2bt[15].
- Champagne's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Vineyards of Champagne[16].
- Champagne's page banner is recorded as Champagne banner.JPG[17].
- Champagne's BBC Things ID is recorded as 01f09435-c356-4f17-a0e7-781664e2ae91[18].
- Champagne's Yale LUX ID is recorded as place/27a604a9-eb13-48f5-8b0e-409e11bc69c4[19].
Body
Geography
Champagne is in the country of France[8]. Located in include Marne[3], a department of France[20], in France[21], founded in 1790[22]; Aube[4], a department of France[23], in France[24], founded in 1790[25]; Aisne[5], a department of France[26], in France[27], founded in 1790[28]; Haute-Marne[6], a department of France[29], in France[30], founded in 1790[31]; and Seine-et-Marne[7], a department of France[32], in France[33], founded in 1790[34]. Champagne's part of is recorded as French viticultural region[11].
Designation and Status
Champagne's instance of is recorded as wine-producing region[10].
Why It Matters
Champagne ranks in the top 5% of wine_producing_region entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (265 views/month).[2] Champagne has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Champagne is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]