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Mid-Century Map the Marne River Valley Champagne Vineyards France 7"x16" Print

$ 6.6

Availability: 70 in stock
  • Region: Europe
  • Condition: New
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

    Description

    Details the vine-growing areas of the Marne Valley in the Champagne region of France.
    (See more info below...)
    Modern Map Reproduction
    Map Size: 7"x16"
    This Map Comes in other Sizes too:
    16"x36" and 23"x52"
    You can find them and more
    Maps of France
    in
    Our Store
    REMEMBER,
    the smaller the map size the harder it is to read the text. The 2 smallest sizes are more for decor than to study.
    The closeup images are based on the biggest print size.
    All Our Posters and Maps Are Made in the USA
    This is a map of the Marne Valley (Vallée de la Marne) in the Champagne region of France. Depicting from Oeuilly to Tours-sur-Marne and from Romery and Fleury-la-Riviere to Moussy, the map focuses on the grape producers, the vignobles. Black dashed lines create the boundaries of the region's villages, which include Epernay, Champillon, Aÿ, and Avenay. Nearly two hundred lieuxdits (which roughly translates to hamlet and embodies the idea of a place name that only locals would know) are numerically identified throughout the region and correspond with an index on the bottom left. An inset on the lower right illustrates the region southwest of Epernay. On the lower left a second inset situates the present map within the Champagne region. The various colors represent the ratings of the échelle des crus: noirs, the way of ranking the quality of grape grown in a given location. These ratings are based on a percentage scale out of 100, and when the system was instituted, each village, not each specific winery, was given a percentage out of 100. Here, five colors are used to mark the different percentages. Grand crus grapes, deemed to be the highest-quality grapes which received a 100% rating, were paid 100% of that a given year's set price. Thus the percentage assigned to the village determined the percentage any given grower would receive for their grapes. The échelle des crus The échelle des crus came into existence after tensions arose between the vine-growers and the Champagne houses. The Champagne houses began importing grapes from other regions in France in an effort to cut costs and generate greater profit. This move angered the local vine-growers, who believed that grapes grown outside Champagne could not produce true Champagne. The growers petitioned the French government, which passed a law requiring that 51% of the grapes used to make Champagne had to come from the Champagne region. This resulted in the Champagne houses hiring agents, who more often than not intimidated growers or demanded bribes so they could buy the grapes at the lowest possible price. These tactics, combined with a string of poor harvests caused by bad weather and the devastation caused by the phylloxera epidemic, led to the Champagne riots of 1901 and 1911. In turn, the riots led to the échelle des crus, an agreement between the producers and the growers. As stated above, the rating system starts with the Grand crus villages (of which there are current seventeen which occupy less than 9% of the land in Champagne) at 100% and descends from there. The ratings go as low as 60% on the present map, but in practice, the ratings do not go below 80%.
    This map comes with a white border around the image
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    -How are the maps shipped?
    They are rolled and placed into a rigid tube or box.
    -Is this available in a larger/smaller size.
    Yes. For smaller or larger sizes, email us.