Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Bordeaux, Port of the Moon' has mentioned 'France' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Prefecture and commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
This article is about the city in France.
Prefecture and commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
")[1]Location of Bordeaux BordeauxShow map of FranceBordeauxShow map of Nouvelle-AquitaineCoordinates: 44xc2xb050xe2x80xb2N 0xc2xb035xe2x80xb2Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf44.84xc2xb0N 0.58xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 44.84; -0.58Coordinates: 44xc2xb050xe2x80xb2N 0xc2xb035xe2x80xb2Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf44.84xc2xb0N 0.58xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 44.84; -0.58CountryFranceRegionNouvelle-AquitaineDepartmentGirondeArrondissementBordeauxCanton5 cantonsIntercommunalityBordeaux Mxc3xa9tropoleGovernmentxc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Mayor (2020xe2x80x932026) Pierre Hurmic[2] (The Greens)Area149.36xc2xa0km2 (19.06xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Urbanxc2xa0(2017)1,172.79xc2xa0km2 (452.82xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Metroxc2xa0(2017)5,613.41xc2xa0km2 (2,167.35xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi)Populationxc2xa0(Jan.xc2xa02018)[3]257,068xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Rank9th in Francexc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Density5,200/km2 (13,000/sqxc2xa0mi)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Urbanxc2xa0(2017[4])927,445xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Urbanxc2xa0density790/km2 (2,000/sqxc2xa0mi)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Metroxc2xa0(2017[5])1,247,977xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Metroxc2xa0density220/km2 (580/sqxc2xa0mi)Demonym(s)BordelaisTime zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)INSEE/Postal code33063 /Websitewww.bordeaux.fr UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficialxc2xa0nameBordeaux, Port of the MoonCriteriaCultural: ii, ivReference1256Inscription2007 (31st session)Area1,731 haBufferxc2xa0zone11,974 ha 1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1xc2xa0km2 (0.386xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
Bordeaux (/bxc9x94xcbx90rxcbx88doxcax8a/ bor-DOH, French:xc2xa0[bxc9x94xcax81do] (listen); Gascon Occitan: Bordxc3xa8u [buxc9xbexcbx88xc3xb0xc9x9bw]) is a port city on the river Garonne in the Gironde department in Southwestern France.
Bordeaux is the centre of Bordeaux Mxc3xa9tropole that has a population of 796,273 (2019), the fifth-largest in France after Paris, Lyon, Marseille and Lille with its immediate suburbs and closest satellite towns.
Bordeaux is an international tourist destination for its architectural and cultural heritage with more than 350 historic monuments,[9] making it, after Paris, the city with the most listed or registered monuments in France.
[17] Under the terms of the Treaty of Brxc3xa9tigny it became briefly the capital of an independent state under Edward, the Black Prince (1362xe2x80x931372), but after the Battle of Castillon (1453) it was annexed by France.
[18] The Port of the Moon supplied the majority of Europe with coffee, cocoa, sugar, cotton and indigo, becoming France's busiest port and the second busiest port in the world after London.
Georges-Eugxc3xa8ne Haussmann, a longtime prefect of Bordeaux, used Bordeaux's 18th-century large-scale rebuilding as a model when he was asked by Emperor Napoleon III to transform the quasi-medieval Paris into a "modern" capital that would make France proud.
Bordeaux is located close to the European Atlantic coast, in the southwest of France and in the north of the Aquitaine region.
Bordeaux is a major centre for business in France as it has the sixth largest metropolitan population in France.
Bordeaux voted in the 2019 European Parliament election in France.
The city is home to 362 monuments historiques (only Paris has more in France) with some buildings dating back to Roman times.
Allxc3xa9es de Tourny Cours de l'Intendance Place du Chapelet Place du Parlement Place des Quinconces, the largest square in France.
La Grande Synagogue, built in 1878 Rue Sainte-Catherine, the longest pedestrian street of France Darwin ecosystem, alternative place into former military barracks The BETASOM submarine base
Musxc3xa9e des Beaux-Arts (Fine arts museum), one of the finest painting galleries in France with paintings by painter such as Tiziano, Veronese, Rubens, Van Dyck, Frans Hals, Claude, Chardin, Delacroix, Renoir, Seurat, Redon, Matisse and Picasso.
[48] They prospered with plantations incomes, until the first slave revolts which concluded in 1848 in the final abolition of slavery in France.
Bordeaux is also the first city in France to have created, in the 1980s, an architecture exhibition and research centre, Arc en rxc3xaave.
Bordeaux is also the home to one of the strongest cricket teams in France and are champions of the South West League.
Ausonius (310xe2x80x93395), Roman poet and teacher of rhetoric Jean Alaux (1786xe2x80x931864), painter Bertrand Andrieu (1761xe2x80x931822), engraver Jean Anouilh (1910xe2x80x931987), dramatist Lucien Arman (1811xe2x80x931873), shipbuilder and politician Yvonne Arnaud (1892xe2x80x931958), pianist, singer and actress Xavier Arnozan (1852xe2x80x931928), physician Floyd Ayitxc3xa9 (born 1988), Togolese footballer Jonathan Ayitxc3xa9 (born 1985), Togolese footballer Christine Barbe, winemaker Gxc3xa9rard Bayo (born 1936), writer and poet, Franxc3xa7ois Bigot (1703xe2x80x931778), last "Intendant" of New France Arnaud Binard (born 1971), actor and producer Rosa Bonheur (1822xe2x80x931899), animal painter and sculptor Grxc3xa9gory Bourdy (born 1982), golfer Samuel Boutal (born 1969), footballer Edmond de Caillou (died c. February 1316) Gascon knight fighting in Scotland Gxc3xa9rald Caussxc3xa9, Presiding Bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Renxc3xa9 Clxc3xa9ment (1913xe2x80x931996), actor, director, writer Jean-Renxc3xa9 Cruchet (1875xe2x80x931959), pathologist Boris Cyrulnik (born 1937), psychiatrist et psychoanalyst Damia (1899xe2x80x931978), singer and actress xc3x89tienne Noxc3xabl Damilaville (1723xe2x80x931768), encyclopxc3xa9diste Lili Damita (1901xe2x80x931994), actress Frxc3xa9dxc3xa9ric Daquin, (born 1978), footballer Danielle Darrieux (born 1917), actress Bernard Delvaille (1931xe2x80x932006), poet, essayist David Diop (1927xe2x80x931960), poet Jean-Francois Domergue, footballer Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122xe2x80x931204), duchess of Aquitaine, queen of France and queen of England Jacques Ellul (1912xe2x80x931994), sociologist, theologian, Christian anarchist Marie Fel (1713xe2x80x931794), opera singer Jean-Luc Fournet (1965), papyrologist Pierre-Jean Garat (1762xe2x80x931823), singer Armand Gensonnxc3xa9 (1758xe2x80x931793), politician Stephen Girard (1750xe2x80x931831), merchant, banker, and Philadelphia philanthropist Jxc3xa9rxc3xb4me Gnako (born 1968), footballer Eugxc3xa8ne Goossens (1867xe2x80x931958), conductor, violinist Anna Hamilton (1864xe2x80x931935), doctor, superintendent of the Protestant Hospital at Bordeaux (1901xe2x80x931934) Pierre Lacour (1745xe2x80x931814), painter Lxc3xa9opold Lafleurance (1865xe2x80x931953), flautist Joseph Henri Joachim Lainxc3xa9 (1767xe2x80x931835), statesman Sainte Jeanne de Lestonnac (1556xe2x80x931640), Roman Catholic saint and foundress of the Sisters of the Company of Mary, Our Lady Andrxc3xa9 Lhote (1885xe2x80x931962), cubist painter Franxc3xa7ois Lhote (1743xe2x80x931808), architect Jean-Baptiste Lynch (1749xe2x80x931835), politician Lucenzo (born 1983), singer Jean-Jacques Magendie (1766xe2x80x931835), officer Franxc3xa7ois Magendie (1783xe2x80x931855), physiologist Bruno Marie-Rose (born 1965), athlete (sprinter) Albert Marquet, (1875xe2x80x931947), painter Franxc3xa7ois Mauriac (1885xe2x80x931970), writer, Nobel laureate 1952 Benjamin Millepied (born 1977), dancer and choreographer xc3x89douard Molinaro (1928xe2x80x932013), film director, screenwriter Pierre Molinier (1900xe2x80x931976), painter, photographer Michel de Montaigne (1533xe2x80x931592), essayist Montesquieu (1689xe2x80x931755), man of letters and political philosopher Olivier Mony (1966xe2x80x93), writer and literary critic xc3x89tienne Marie Antoine Champion de Nansouty (1768xe2x80x931815), general Elie Okobo, basketball player Pierre Palmade (born 1968), actor and comedian St. Paulinus of Nola (354xe2x80x93431), educator, religious figure xc3x89mile Pxc3xa9reire (1800xe2x80x931875), banker and industrialist Sophie Pxc3xa9tronin (born 1945), aid worker and humanitarian Albert Pitres (1848xe2x80x931928), neurologist Hippolyte Pradelles (1824xe2x80x931913), naturalist painter Georges Antoine Pons Rayet (1839xe2x80x931906), astronomer, discoverer of the Wolf-Rayet stars, & founder of the Bordeaux Observatory Odilon Redon (1840xe2x80x931916), painter Richard II of England (1367xe2x80x931400), king Pierre Rode (1774xe2x80x931830), violinist Olinde Rodrigues (1795xe2x80x931851), mathematician, banker and social reformer Marie-Sabine Roger (born 1957), writer Bernard Sarrette (1765xe2x80x931858), conductor and music pedagogue Franxc3xa7ois Seignouret (1783xe2x80x931852), furniture manufacturer Jean-Jacques Sempxc3xa9 (born 1932), cartoonist Florent Serra (born 1981), tennis player Alfred Smith, (1854xe2x80x931932), painter Philippe Sollers, (born 1936), writer Wilfried Tekovi, (born 1989), Togolese footballer Elie Vinet (1509xe2x80x931587), historian and humanist of the Renaissance