- colombier, fuie or
pigeonnier. With its
extensive cultivation of grain, the
favourite food of pigeons,
France had 42,000
pigeonniers by the 17th century...
-
fortifications en France, Flammarion, Paris, 1997, p. 304 Base Mérimée:
Pigeonnier proche du château, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French) Wikimedia...
- d'Augerville and his son Louis.
There they
built a château fort
flanked by a
pigeonnier.
Louis d'Augerville died in 1248
without an heir, so the
estate went to...
- state. The
plantation has
numerous outbuildings or "dependencies": a
pigeonnier or dovecote, a
plantation store, the only
surviving French Creole barn...
-
Pigeonnier. OCLC 45167879. Faure,
Gabriel (1921). Les
amours de
Chateaubriand et de
Madame de Vichet. Félicien-en-Vivarais:
Pigeonnier. OCLC 19683598...
- 8 May 1999, aged 78. His
ashes were
scattered at his
former estate Le
Pigeonnier in Gr****e,
southern France.
Bogarde was
nominated five
times as Best Actor...
- garconnière,
where young bachelors of the
family or male
guests could stay; a
pigeonnier for
keeping pigeons (a sign of
status among the planters); an overseer's...
- its
large HLM high-rise
tower blocks:
North of the city the
quarters du
Pigeonnier,
which is
famous for its w****end market, Messenger, Mozart, Fafet-Brossolette-la...
-
believed to
cause headaches. From the
Middle Ages, a
dovecote (French
pigeonnier) was a
common outbuilding on an
estate that
aimed to be self-sufficient...
-
Weiler and the
nearby countryside,
namely the soft
hills by the Col du
Pigeonnier. The 1st
Cavalry Brigade would patrol the
frontier east of Wissembourg...