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Vin Bordeaux
Bordeaux
Chateau Beau Sejour Becot
Château Beau-Séjour Bécot is located just to the west of the medieval town of Saint-Emilion, in the very heart of this prestigious appellation. Classified a Premier Grand Cru Classé until 1986, the château lost its rank as a "Premier", but regained it in 1996 thanks to a ruling by the INAO (Institut National des Appellations d'Origine).The estate was named Beau-Séjour in 1787 by General Jacques de Carle, the proprietor at the time. Michel B ...
Chateau Cambon la Pelouse
Chateau Cambon La Pelouse is one of the oldest producers of wine in the Haut-Medoc region of France, with a history of fine wine that stretches back to the late 17th century. This 35 hectare Bordeaux vineyard has made an impressive contribution to the reputation of the Medoc sub-region, especially in England.The modern history of the vineyard begins in 1996 when it was purchased by Jean Pierre Marie, who renovated the property and provided it wit ...
Château Canon La Gaffelière
Owned since 1971 by the Count von Neipperg family and located at the foot of the coast south of the medieval village of Saint-Emilion, Château Canon La Gaffelière is a 19.5 hectare Premier Grand Cru Classé domain located on clay-limestone and clay-sand soils . The domain is Certified Organic Agriculture since 2014, producing wines of rare elegance, finesse and aromatic complexity from Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon grape va ...
Chateau Carbonnieux
The history of Carbonnieux goes back a very long way, and records show that wine was made there at least as early as the 12th century. Benedictine monks from Sainte-Croix abbey in Bordeaux replanted and renovated the estate in the 18th century. They took advantage of the exceptionally pale, clear color of the white wine to label it as "Carbonnieux mineral water", which they then proceeded to ship to the sultan of Turkey.Marc Perrin acquired and r ...
Château Cos d'Estournel
Château Cos d`Estournel is named after its 19th century owner, Louis-Gaspard d'Estournel, and it was he who built the bizarre oriental edifice that is a landmark for any tourist in the Médoc. Today Cos d'Estournel is, without doubt, the leading estate in St-Estéphe. It is located in the south of the appellation on the border with Pauillac and its vineyards are superbly sited on a south-facing gravel ridge with a high clay content. Château ...
Chateau d'Agassac
Chateau D'Agassac first came to light in the 13th century, built on a marshy plain bordered by a stream, which runs through the estate to the edge of the grounds where a clump of pine trees grows. In the 16th century, the Chateau was the subject of a "renaissance" and two additions in the shape of its new defensive towers. The 20th century was drawing to a close when the estate was acquired by the insurance company Groupama. In good viticultural ...
Château d'Yquem
The history of Château d'Yquem is like a novel, an epic saga spanning more than four centuries, full of events and personalities. In the Middle Ages, the estate actually belonged to the King of England, who was also the Duke of Aquitaine at the time. In 1453, southwestern France was again brought under the rule of the French crown by Charles VII and has remained French ever since. A century and a half later, in 1593, a scion of a local noble fam ...
Château Fleur Cardinale
The estate was bought in 2001 by Florence and Dominique Decoster, and it has benefited from major investments which have made Château Fleur Cardinale one of the top names of the appellation. They replanted much of the vineyards, as well as totally renovated the winery and chai. They also engaged the services of the ubiquitous Michel Rolland. The two properties owned Decoster family extend across a 23.5 hectare area for the Château Fleur Card ...
Château Grand-Puy-Lacoste
While this château has existed since 1737, it didn't get its current name until the 19th century, when it was acquired through marriage by the Lacoste family. Pierre-Fredéric Lacoste constructed the building in its present form in 1855, the same year it was designated a fifth growth in the 1855 Classification, but when the family eventually sold it in the 1930s it fell into a state of disrepair. Its fortune changed in 1978 when its bachelo ...
Chateau Guiraud
Chateau Guiraud is a large Sauternes property that is the only 1er Cru Classé, with the exception of its illustrious neighbour Chateau d`Yquem, that is located within the commune of Sauternes itself. Guiraud was owned for a short period by the Maxwell family, who invested heavily in the property, although the wines remained fairly pedestrian. In 1981 it was acquired by a Canadian, Hamilton Narby, and he has transformed Guiraud into one of the ve ...
Château Haut-Brion
Château Haut-Brion is the oldest and by far the smallest of the "Premiers Grands Crus" vineyards of the Gironde 1855 classification. Chateau Haut-Brion is one of the few remaining family-owned domains of the Bordeaux region with a history going back to the 16th century. It has been owned by the American Dillon family since 1935. Situated in what is now Pessac-Leognan, the property finds itself now in the suburbs of the ever-encroaching city o ...
Chateau La Lagune
Chateau La Lagune is a “3eme Cru Classe” property that produces some of the finest wines in the Haut-Medoc AC. La Lagune's history dates back to 1715 when its handsome chateau was constructed. The vineyards were first planted in 1724. La Lagune had hit hard times and fallen into disrepair when Georges Brunet bought it in 1954. He replanted the vineyards and totally renovated the chai. By the time he sold it to the Ayala Champagne firm in 1961 ...
Chateau La Mission Haut-Brion
In 1664, Madame de Lestonnac bequeathed the domaine of La Mission Haut-Brion to the Peres Lazaristes, a congregation founded by Saint Vincent de Paul. The "good fathers" worked to restore their property to its rightful worth. After them, the Chiapella family (owners in the 19th century) and Woltner family (1919-1983) never stopped improving the vineyard and modernizing the cellars. Since 1983, the Dillon family, already owner of Chateau Haut-Brio ...
Chateau Labegorce
This elegant neoclassical château is located on the famous Route des Châteaux. Seventy hectares of the 250-hectare estate are devoted to viticulture. Bordering on châteaux Margaux and Lascombes, this property is mentioned in the 1868 edition of Cocks and Feret (“Bordeaux and its Wines”), which tells us of the existence since 1332 of “a vineyard belonging to the noble La Bégorce family”. The château is described as “... one of the m ...
Chateau Lespault-Martillac
Chateau Lespault-Martillac is one of the oldest estates in Martillac, and wine has been made here since Roman times. It is located on a magnificent gravelly rise overlooking the commune. The chateau, an 18th century manor house, and the newly-renovated cellars are located in the heart of small vineyard with old Merlot vines producing low yields of high-quality grapes. Run by Olivier Bernard, also the proprietor of Domaine de Chevalier, since 2009 ...
Château Pape Clément
Planted in 1300, the vineyard at Château Pape-Clément is the oldest in Bordeaux. In 1306, upon the appointment of Bertrand de Goth, Archbishop of Bordeaux, as pope, the vineyard took his papal name - Clement V. He is also the one who gives it as a gift to his successor - Cardinal Arnaud de Canteloup. Bertrand is the one who planted red grape varieties. The white grape varieties were planted along the river near Lormont. Château Pape-Clément ...
Château Pichon Baron
The estate was founded in the late 17th Century. This period was known as the Grand Siècle, or “great century”, in reference to Louis XIV’s 1661 accession to the French throne. In 1689 Pierre Desmezures de Rauzan, an influential wine merchant and steward of the prestigious Latour and Margaux estates, bought plots of vines close to the Latour estate to create Enclos Rauzan. These vines were part of his daughter Thérèse’s dowry whe ...
Château Pontet-Canet
Jean Francois Pontet, Royal Master of the Horse in the early 18th Century, bought and consolidated several plots of land located northwest of Pauillac. Several years later, in 1750, his descendants bought neighboring vineyards in an area named "Canet", thus creating one of the largest estates in the entire Medoc. Chateau Pontet-Canet's topography and soil predestined it to produce great wine. In 1865, the noted wine shipper Hermann Cruse acquired ...
Chateau Quintus
In June 2011, Domaine Clarence Dillon, owners of Chateau Haut-Brion and Chateau La Mission Haut-Brion, acquired a beautiful estate in Saint-Emilion, today renamed Château Quintus.The originality of this extraordinary terroir lies in its diversity of soils, slopes and orientations. It is therefore hardly surprising that this wine was featured between 1844 and 1848 - under its old name Château Tertre Daugay - among the 14 most sought after and mo ...
Château Rauzan-Ségla
The wines here have delighted many well-know figures, most famously Thomas Jefferson, and some decades later, the 1855 Classification ranked Chateau Rauzan-Segla as a Second Growth. The actual chateau was built in 1903, designed by architect Louis Garros, who drew inspiriation from the original Perigord-style buildings in the the chateau, as well as G. LeBreton who designed the park and green spaces. Chateau Rauzan-Segla and Mouton Rothschild we ...
Château Smith Haut Lafitte
Thanks to its 55 hectares of superb gravelly vineyards, Smith Haut Lafitte is often referred to as the "archetypical Graves." The estate's history goes back to the Crusades, and a Scottish navigator, George Smith, who became the owner of the estate in the 18th century. He was followed by M. Duffour-Dubergier, Mayor of Bordeaux, and then Louis Eschenauer, a famous wine shipper. In 1990, Daniel Cathiard, former Olympic skiing champion, also fell un ...
Château Troplong Mondot
Premier Grand Cru Classé in Saint-Emilion, Château Troplong Mondot stands out with refinement, boasting a strong wine identity, a perfectly controlled vineyard, and an innate welcoming sense. Located on the highest point of Saint-Emilion's famous limestone plateau, the 43-hectare estate held in one piece stands on some of the most enviable and unique terroirs of the Right Bank, with ideal geological conditions and exposure. The exceptional ...
Chateau Villa Bel-Air
Chateau Villa Bel-Air is located in the Southern part of Graves, in the parish of Saint-Morillon, near La Brede. Villa Bel-Air's buildings have been listed as part of France's historical monuments and are a perfect illustration of the French Revolution period. In 1777, Louis Dufaure, Marquis de Lajarte, bought a property situated in the parish of Saint-Morillon called Bel-Air de Bellevue. In 1791, he undertook a very fine charterhouse of great ar ...
Domaine Clarence Dillon
Created in 1935, the family-owned and managed company Domaine Clarence Dillon has the unique privilege of producing five rare and exceptional estate wines: two reds and two whites from first-growth Château Haut-Brion and its sibling Château La Mission Haut-Brion. Since the 2011 vintage, they are represent one of the finest wines from St-Emilion: Château Quintus.In 2005, the company created the Bordeaux fine wine merchant Clarence Dillon Wines ...
Clos des Lunes - Domaine de Chevalier Famille Bernard
A few years ago, Olivier Bernard and the team at Domaine de Chevalier, made a commitment to make Clos des Lunes, an old vineyard in Sauternes, one of Bordeaux's most appreciated. Over time, this terroir has proven to be capable of producing some of the most outstanding dry white wines. Clos des Lunes is located in the heart of Sauternes, a region famous for its sweet wines. Attacked by the noble mold Botrytis Cinerea, the grapes enter the natu ...
Jean-Luc Thunevin
Jean-Luc Thunevin became a "star" of the wine world in less than a decade with his famous garage wine "Château Valandraud". Obsessed by wine, opinionated, and determined, he finally realized his dream in 1991 with the first vintage of Chateau Valandraud. This was the start of a fantastic adventure leading to a quick success. From then on, he became the inspiration and leader for other garagistes. All these micro cuvees come from low yields to be ...
Michel Lynch
The name of Michel Lynch, the knight who owned Chateau Lynch-Bages and was Mayor of Pauillac during the French Revolution, is inextricably linked with the great wines of Bordeaux.Towards the end of the 1980s, the tireless globetrotter in the name of promoting Bordeaux wines, Jean-Michel Cazes devised a sort of spiritual affiliation in honour of Michel Lynch, naming this new range of wines after him. Jean-Michel Cazes is one of Bordeaux's legendar ...
Château Lafon
Château Lafon is located in the heart of the Sauternes region and enjoys the rare privilege of forming an enclave in the midst of the vineyards of the famous Château d'Yquem, its nearest neighbour. ...
Château Talbot
From the plateau of Saint-Julien, one can spot Château Talbot in the midst of an ocean of vines, parks, and tall trees. The estate has a rich history. Its name originates with Connétable Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, governor of Guyenne as well as a famous English military commander, who was defeated at the battle of Castillon in 1453. In 1855, at the time of the Médoc and Graves growth classifications ordered by Emperor Napoleon III, Château T ...
Château Palmer
In 1814, Lieutenant Colonel Charles Palmer's name was on everyone's lips. His conquests, both military and romantic, had built the reputation of this future Major General of the British Army and aide-de-camp to the future King George IV. Madame Marie Brunet de Ferrière, widow of Baron de Gascq, fell under his spell. Sitting by his side on a long journey from Bordeaux to Paris, the young widow sold him the Médoc wine estate she had just inherite ...
Château Carbonneau
Château Carbonneau is located east of the Gironde department, bordered by the towns of Pessac sur Dordogne and Gensac, 25 minutes east of Saint Emilion. The castle was built starting in 1860, on the site of an ancient mansion, by the Bachan family. The construction site was chosen to be located above abundant and shallow groundwater, which provided very pure water to the springs and wells that are still used today. The architecture and orientati ...
Château Angludet
Château Angludet is a vineyard located in the Bordeaux region, Margaux appellation, in the Médoc, on the left bank of the Gironde. The estate is managed by Benjamin Sichel who adopts biodynamic practices to passionately produce great red wines. Angludet is one of the oldest properties in the Médoc. It owes its name to the knight Bertrand de Angludet who built his house there in the 12th century. The vine was probably introduced at the beginni ...
Château L'Enclos
Built during the 17th century, Château L’Enclos is certainly one of the most beautiful of its appellation, representing the wealth and elegance of the region’s historical and cultural heritage. The structure was built in the center of the property, 7 hectares around the castle and 16 others on the hillsides of Pineuilh and Saint-André-et-Appelles. The wines of the castle have the appellation AOC Sainte-Foy Bordeaux (AOC Saint ...
Château Tronquoy
Château Tronquoy is among the oldest vineyards in the Saint-Estèphe appellation. Completely renovated in 2006, the property combines the charm of its original buildings (18th century) with the modernity of its technical installations. Its 30-hectare vineyard, composed of deep clay gravel, produces two Grand Vins with a unique and assertive character: one red and one white. From 2021, the property is involved in its certification in organic vi ...
Domaine de Chevalier
In 1983, the Bernard family decided to buy Domaine de Chevalier. Olivier Bernard was asked to become the architect of the new regime at Domaine de Chevalier, and he was overwhelmed by the scale of the challenge. The family's message was clear. The task was to continue the work started one hundred and twenty years ago and establish a long-term approach to the heritage and quality. With this ambition in mind, Olivier Bernard made many investme ...
Château Léoville Las Cases
One of the oldest Medoc estates, Domaine de Léoville belonged to some of the wealthiest and most influential noble French families before it was acquired by the Las Cases family. The estate was split up between 1826 and 1840 because of the French Revolution. Château Léoville Las Cases was created from 3/5 of the original estate and the heart of the domain. The Grand Vin’s current terroir has been at the historic heart of the origina ...
Château Angélus
Less than a kilometer from the famous Saint-Emilion bell tower, located on the much-vaunted "foot of the hill", Angélus is the brainchild of eight generations of the Boüard de Laforest family. In the first classification of the wines of the Saint-Emilion appellation in 1954, Château Angélus received the status of Grand Cru Classé. Since then it has enjoyed a solid reputation that helped it survive the Bordeaux wine crisis of 1973 and partic ...
Château Les Carmes Haut-Brion
Château Les Carmes Haut-Brion is a Bordeaux property that was once part of the famous Château Haut-Brion. Located in Pessac-Léognan, on the southwestern edge of Bordeaux and on the left bank of the Garonne River, the vineyards and wines were dominated by Merlot and Cabernet Franc, with a small amount of Cabernet Sauvignon – an unusual proportion for the commune. Located in the heart of the oldest part of Bordeaux, it is the only château loc ...
Château Brane-Cantenac
At Brane, a deep understanding of the unique terroir gives complete confidence in its extraordinary potential. The philosophy of Henri Lurton, the owner of the domain, is that actions speak louder than words. By focusing heavily on terroir, the estate team ensures that Brane is recognized for its authentic value. The relentless pursuit of excellence in winemaking is a collective effort, underpinned by a "family" ethos and unwavering support.Tha ...
Château Rocheyron
The Château Rocheyron domain comprises 8.45 ha of the historic Saint-Émilion land, the famous limestone plateau. Since 2010, this domain has been run by Silvio Denz and the Danish oenologist Peter Sisseck. The two combine their knowledge to allow these 8.45 hectares of vines to reveal their full potential each year. Biodynamic viticulture has been implemented here since 2014 and starting with the 2020 harvest, the field has successfully obtai ...
Château Margaux
The history and reputation of Château Margaux owe as much to the genius of the place as to the contribution of the people who have served it for five centuries. 200 years ago, the Marquis de la Colonilla had already marked the Domain by building, in honor of wine, this great architectural heritage in a style inspired by ancient Greece. The architect Louis Combes designed the castle's peristyle in homage to the Parthenon. In 1977, André Me ...
Château Pavie
The Domaine has been owned by Gérard Perse since 1998, who has done his utmost to give it an extraordinary boost, elevating it to the rank of the most prestigious Bordeaux wines. It was in 2012 that the consecration came for Château Pavie, when it acceded to the title of Premier Grand Cru Classé "A" in the Saint-Emilion classification, a position it retained during the latest classification revision in September 2022. The Château Pa ...
Château La Conseillante
Since 1871, the Nicolas family has taken special care of the La Conseillante estate. For successive generations, with each vintage new chapters have been added to its story. Each generation of winegrowers had the same goal, which was to preserve this unique vineyard and pass it on to the next generation. The La Conseillante estate prides itself on its exceptional features. First, its position is unique in the landscape of the Pomerol appellati ...
Château Montrose
The history of the Château Montrose domain, written over two centuries by three families of owners, is the depository of their spirit, marked by the search for excellence and legendary wines. Pioneers in the Médoc, visionary builders and wise managers, all these families knew how to work and capitalize on this unique terroir. The estate owes to them the foundation on which Montrose builds today its image and its unique place in the world of exc ...
Château d’Issan
The history of Château d'Issan consists mainly of a long list of property transfers and inheritances. Through inheritance and marriage, the estate passed from owner to owner, and all contributed in their own way to its fame and to the formation of its unique character. In the 12th century the property was a domain then named La Mothe-Cantenac, later becoming Théobon Manor when an heiress married a gentleman of that name. For nearly three c ...
Château Mouton-Rothschild
Formerly known as Château Brane-Mouton, in 1853 when Baron Nathaniel de Rothschild acquired the property located on the left bank in the Bordeaux region, the name of the castle was changed to Château Mouton-Rothschild. Under the leadership of Baron Philippe de Rothschild, Mouton-Rothschild's reputation grew, becoming a true emblem of the Pauillac appellation. Taking over the reins of the estate in 1922, Baron Philippe de Rothschild was the au ...
Château-Figeac
In the heart of the Saint-Émilion territory, classified as world heritage by UNESCO, the emblematic property of an influential family in the region, Château-Figeac stretches over 54 hectares "Premier Grand Cru Classé". However, nearly a quarter of the property is kept without vines to preserve the environment and natural balance. Thus, with its exceptional terroir and its outstanding natural areas, the property is considered the true "green ...
Château Ducru-Beaucaillou
Château Ducru-Beaucaillou owes its name to its "beautiful pebbles" ("beaux Cailloux", in French) that geologists refer to less romantically as Gunzian gravel. These quartz pebbles were deposited by the ancient Garonne at the beginning of the early Quaternary period, some two million years ago. Here at Château Ducru-Beaucaillou, since 1720, the masters of winemaking (meticulous winegrowers, expert oenologists and confirmed epicureans) gathere ...
Château Calon Ségur
Historians have identified successive owners of Château Calon Ségur since the 12th century, with the Gascq, Ségur, Dumoulin, Lestapis and Gasqueton families being among the most recent and best known. In 2012, the Gasqueton family sold Château Calon Ségur and Château Capbern to Suravenir, a subsidiary of the Crédit Mutuel Arkéa group. Jean-Pierre Denis, its president, formed a partnership with Jean-François Moueix and his son Jean, the ...