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17.9% of Languedoc-Roussillon was formerly the province of Gévaudan, now the department of Lozère. A small part of the former Gévaudan lies inside the current Auvergne region. Gévaudan is often considered to be a sub-province inside the province of Languedoc, in which case Languedoc would account for 86.6% of Languedoc-Roussillon.
TER Languedoc-Roussillon was the regional rail network serving Languedoc-Roussillon région in France. The région became the organising authority on 1 January 2002. The région became the organising authority on 1 January 2002.
Château de Canet-en-Roussillon: Canet-en-Roussillon - Castle: Château de Castelnou: Castelnou - Castle: Château Royal de Collioure: Collioure - Château de Fenouillet: Fenouillet - Fort Lagarde: Prats-de-Mollo-la-Preste - Fort Libéria: Villefranche-de-Conflent - Palace: Palais des rois de Majorque: Perpignan: Classified as a Monument ...
Languedoc-Roussillon Tourist Board Official Tourism Website for the Region; The Canal du Midi at Béziers Official Béziers Website; The Languedoc-Roussillon Official Site of the Région. (in French) The Hérault tourist board website Department of Hérault in Languedoc Région. All informations to discover Hérault and to book your holidays in ...
The Regional council of Languedoc-Roussillon was the deliberative assembly of the former French region of Languedoc-Roussillon, local authority decentralized acting on the regional territory. It was headquartered in Montpellier , [ 1 ] in a Hôtel built in 1988 by Ricardo Bofill , [ 2 ] overlooking the Lez (from its left bank) and the Place de ...
Le Château de Quéribus. Cathar castles (in French Châteaux cathares) are a group of medieval castles located in the Languedoc region. Some had a Cathar connection in that they offered refuge to dispossessed Cathars in the thirteenth century.
Clairette de Languedoc; Coteaux du Languedoc – Red wine, White wine, Rosé; Coteaux du Languedoc Pic Saint Loup; Costières de Nîmes – Red wine. According to some sources, this appellation is now considered a part of Rhône rather than Languedoc. Faugères – Red wine; Muscat de Frontignan – White wine, Fortified wine; Muscat de Lunel ...
The Languedoc-Roussillon region shares many terrain and climate characteristics with the neighboring regions of Southern Rhône and Provence.The region stretches 150 miles (240 km) from the Banyuls AOC at the Spanish border and Pyrenees in the west, along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea to the river Rhône and Provence in the east. [2]