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The champagne coupe is a shallow, broad-bowled saucer shaped stemmed glass generally capable of containing 180 to 240 ml (6.1 to 8.1 US fl oz) of liquid. [4] [14] [15] [16] Originally called a tazza (cup), it first appeared circa 1663, when it was created by Venetian glassmakers employed at a Greenwich glass factory owned by the Duke of Buckingham. [5]
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12 Fantasias for Flute without Bass, composed and published in Hamburg by G.P.Telemann. Pennsylvania German 12 Fantasien für Flöte ohne Bass, komponiert und herausgegeben in Hamburg bei G.P.Telemann.
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This work was painted at the crux of Picasso's classical period from 1919 to 1929, in which he was greatly intrigued by classical art. At the time that he had painted The Pipes of Pan, Picasso was traveling extensively in Italy, and consequently drew inspiration for this painting in the Greco-Roman art he found there. [3] His admiration for ...
Poster by Alphonse Mucha (1896). An entrepreneur, Nicolas Ruinart realized the ambitions of his uncle, Dom Thierry Ruinart: to make Ruinart an authentic Champagne house.In the period immediately following the 1728 edict of Louis XV, [1] which authorized the transport of wine in bottles, the house was established.