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Corporacion Cigar Export Dominican Republic Arturo Fuente: Arturo Fuente Dominican Republic AVO Davidoff: Dominican Republic Baccarat Davidoff Imperial Tobacco Dominican Republic Backwoods Smokes: Bahman ITC Ben-Hur Cigars Wm. Tegge & Co. Detroit, Michigan [9] Black & Mild: Blackbird Cigar Co. Dominican Republic [10] Bolívar: 1. Habanos S.A.; 2.
Quesada Cigars, formally known as MATASA, is a family-owned factory based in the Dominican Republic that specializes in the manufacture of premium cigars. It is best known brand is the Quesada, Casa Magna, Heisenberg & Fonseca line of cigars. Its current president and owner is Manuel "Manolo" Quesada, Jr.
La Flor Dominicana (Dominican Flower) is a "boutique-style" cigar brand [1] The cigars were manufactured by Tabacalera La Flor S.A. and were first produced in Santiago, Dominican Republic in 1996. The company was founded by Litto Gomez , a former jeweler turned cigar maker and Ines Lorenzo. [2]
General Cigar Company is the largest manufacturer of premium cigars in the world. ... (6,500 m 2) factory in Santiago, Dominican Republic. ...
Cohiba is a brand for two kinds of premium cigar, one produced in Cuba for Habanos S.A., the Cuban state-owned tobacco company, and the other produced in the Dominican Republic for US-based General Cigar Company. The Cuban brand is filled with tobacco that comes from the Vuelta Abajo region of Cuba which has undergone an extra fermentation process.
In 1991, the first Dominican-made Davidoff cigars were launched, continuing the product lines and cigar formats of their Cuban predecessors. With the move to the Dominican Republic, the Château series was renamed "Grand Cru", and the individual formats were numbered instead of carrying the names of vineyard estates.
Star Cigar is an internationally distributed brand of cigars and accessories manufactured in the Dominican Republic. The company is one of the top 36 cigar manufacturers worldwide. [1] A single robusto from the Star Cigar line
Sales, like the cigars, were entirely within the Dominican territory. In 1912, Herminio León Jimenes – Eduardo's brother – suggested moving the fabric to Santiago; said move was made during the end of that year. U.S. military forces marched into the Dominican Republic and occupied the country from 1916 to 1924.