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Words near each other
・ Champagne cocktail
・ Champagne cola
・ Champagne De Venoge
・ Champagne Delamotte
・ Champagne Downtown
・ Champagne fairs
・ Champagne Fever
・ Champagne flow
・ Champagne for Caesar
・ Champagne for My Real Friends, Real Pain for My Sham Friends
・ Champagne for One
・ Champagne Galop
・ Champagne gene
・ Champagne hillsides, houses and cellars
・ Champagne in paradiso
Champagne in popular culture
・ Champagne in Seashells
・ Champagne Jam
・ Champagne Jeeper
・ Champagne Kisses (Jessie Ware song)
・ Champagne Krug
・ Champagne Ladies and Blue Ribbon Babies
・ Champagne Landing
・ Champagne Lanson
・ Champagne Lemonade
・ Champagne Life
・ Champagne Mercier
・ Champagne Nightmares
・ Champagne no Koi
・ Champagne or Guinness


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Champagne in popular culture : ウィキペディア英語版
Champagne in popular culture

Champagne has featured prominently in popular culture for over a century, due in part to a long history of effective marketing and product placement by leading Champagne houses and their representatives, such as CIVC. In time this created an association of Champagne with luxury and exclusivity.〔R. Phillips ''A Short History of Wine'' pg 245 Harper Collins 2000 ISBN 0-06-621282-0〕 The popularity and positive attributes associated with Champagne have caused many other sparkling wine producers not located in the French wine region of Champagne to incorrectly use the name "champagne" to describe their wines.〔E. McCarthy & M. Ewing-Mulligan ''"French Wine for Dummies"'' pg 149-150 Wiley Publishing 2001 ISBN 0-7645-5354-2〕
==Early history==
Although sparkling wine was invented in the Limoux area of Languedoc in 1535, the wine we know today as Champagne was first produced in the French region of the same name around 1700. For centuries prior to this, still wine from the region had been served as part of coronation festivities throughout Europe, and the French aristocracy had offered it in tribute to foreign kings, associations with celebration and occasion which survive to the present day.
When the ''méthode champenoise'' was introduced into the region, its ready association with luxury and power brought the unique sparkling wine from Champagne to the fore. The leading practitioners devoted considerable energy to creating a history and identity for their wine, associating it and themselves with nobility and royalty. Careful advertising and marketing associated Champagne with prestige, luxury, festivities and rites of passage, coinciding with an emerging middle class looking for symbols of upward mobility.〔J. Robinson (ed) ''"The Oxford Companion to Wine"'' Third Edition pg 150-152 & 656-657 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0-19-860990-6〕

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