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  1. Château de Cayx kan spores til 1300-tallet, hvor det kontrollerede sejladsen på Lot-floden. I 1600-tallet blev slottet erhvervet af Lefranc de Pompignan -familien. Det var den, der i 1700-tallet indrettede kældrene til vinproduktion. I 1974 købte dronning Margrethe og prins Henrik slottet, det blev restaureret og vinproduktionen genoptaget.

  2. In the summer of 1974, HM Queen Margrethe and Prince Henrik bought Château de Cayx, which is located near the city of Cahors in southern France. The purchase of Château de Cayx came about during a summer stay at Prince Henrik’s childhood home Le Cayrou in 1974, when Queen Margrethe and Prince Henrik heard that the château was up for sale.

  3. Château de Caen. Coordinates: 49°11′11″N 0°21′46″W. The Château de Caen is a castle in the Norman city of Caen in the Calvados département ( Normandy ). It has been officially classed as a Monument historique since 1997. [1]

  4. Château. Para la población francesa, véase Château (Saona y Loira). Château de Chaumont-sur-Loire en el Valle del Loira, Francia. Château de Montsoreau, Montsoreau, Francia. Un château ( ʃɑ.to ⓘ, en plural châteaux) es cómo se denomina en francés un castillo, un palacio o una casa señorial, 1 que sea residencia o casa de campo de ...

  5. Europe. The Château de Montsoreau is a Flamboyant Gothic castle [1] in the Loire Valley, [2] directly built in the Loire [3] riverbed. It is located in the market town of Montsoreau, in the Maine-et-Loire département of France, close to Saumur, Chinon, Fontevraud-l'Abbaye, and Candes-Saint-Martin. The Château de Montsoreau is situated at the ...

  6. Château de Chenonceau's location in France. The Château de Chenonceau ( French: [ʃɑto də ʃənɔ̃so]) is a French château spanning the river Cher, near the small village of Chenonceaux, Indre-et-Loire, Centre-Val de Loire. [1] It is one of the best-known châteaux of the Loire Valley. [2]

  7. The Château de Chantilly (pronounced [ʃɑto d(ə) ʃɑ̃tiji]) is a historic French château located in the town of Chantilly, Oise, about 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of Paris. The site comprises two attached buildings: the Petit Château, built around 1560 for Anne de Montmorency , and the Grand Château, which was destroyed during the French Revolution and rebuilt in the 1870s.