-
growth diminished. Albi surp****ed
Castres as the most
populous metropolitan area of Tarn. The po****tion of
Castres reached its peak in 1975,
after that...
-
Castres may
refer to:
Castres, a
commune in the Tarn
department in the Midi-Pyrénées
region Castres, Aisne, a
commune in the
Aisne department in the Picardy...
-
Castres Olympique (French pronunciation: [kastʁ ɔlɛ̃pik], CAST-(r)) is a
French rugby union club
located in the
Occitanian city of
Castres and is currently...
- Édouard
Castres (Geneva, 21 June 1838 – Annem****e, 28 June 1902) was a
Swiss painter.
Castres studied fine arts with Barthélemy Menn in
Geneva before...
-
Castres Cathedral (Cathédrale Saint-Benoît de
Castres), now the
Roman Catholic church of
Saint Benoît (Saint Benedict), is a
historical religious building...
- d'Épernon,
Countess of Vendôme and of
Castres, (Jeanne de Ponthieu, dame d'Épernon,
comtesse de Vendôme et de
Castres,
before 1336 – 30 May 1376) better...
- the
dioceses of Albi and
Castres (which
found themselves merged in 1817). The new
department had five districts: Albi,
Castres, Lavaur, Gaillac, Lacaune...
- 2024, he
scored a try on his
Champions Cup
debut in a 38-8
victory over
Castres Olympique in the
opening round of the 2024-25 tournament. That month, he...
- à
propos de
Castres-Grenoble en 1993 : " Je me suis trompé "". sudouest. 1 June 2013.
Retrieved 24
October 2013. "Top 14: Toulon-
Castres, souviens-toi...
- into
effect in
March 2015. Its seat is in
Castres. It
consists of the
following communes:
Burlats Castres (partly)
Montfa Roquecourbe Saint-Germier Saint-Jean-de-Vals...