Resistance movement and
sales of wine, control of
seizures of wine stocks
taxes on wine
vineyards, takeover of
See also Hiding, fibbing and fobbing off campaign; Weinführers
Gestapo
Goebbels, Joseph
Gombaud, Madame
Göring, Field Marshal Hermann
Bömers and
economic policies
requisitions policy
wine appreciation
wine policy
Goundry, Abbé Pierre
Grand Siècle champagne
Grand Vin de Château Latour
Great Depression
Groupe Collaboration
Guestier, Daniel
Gun-running
Haislip, General Wade
Halle aux Vins, bombing of
Henkel, Otto
Hiding, fibbing and fobbing off campaign
brothel incident
burying of wine
“dusting” bottles to make them look old
Flanner’s description of
forgery used in
Germans’ awareness of being tricked
historical perspective on
inferior wine passed off as top quality
misdirection of wine shipments
ownership of wine properties, obfuscation of
pranks on Germans
purgative water mistaken for wine
restaurants’ hiding of wine
“security” provided by French citizens
siphoning of wine bound for Germany
Vichy government’s participation
in World War I
Himmler, Heinrich
Hindenburg, Paul von
Hitler, Adolf
Berchtesgaden/Eagle’s Nest complex
looting policy in France
onset of World War II
Paris’s destruction, orders for
Ribbentrop and
Russian front
social life
wine, distaste for
wine policy in France
Hitler Youth
Hodez, Roger
Horses, requisitioning of
Hospices de Beaune
500th anniversary celebration
vineyard given to Pétain
Hôtel de France (restaurant)
Hôtel Negresco
How I Liberated Burgundy (Vaughan– Thomas)
Huet, Gaston
Calais evacuation attempt
postwar fortunes
prisoner-of-war life
recovery of winemaking business
release from prison
return home
wine fête
Hugel, André
Hugel, Emile
Hugel, Georges
Russian front experience
Hugel, Jean
Hugel, Johnny
Hugel, Marie
Hugel family
conflicts with Germans
liberation of Alsace-Lorraine
350th anniversary celebration
war, fears about
winemaking business
Institut National des Appellations d’Origine (INAO)
International Congress of the Vine and Wine
Irouléguy wine
Is Paris Burning? (Collins and Lapierre)
Jayer, Henri
Jews
deportations from France
German campaign against
hiding from Germans
Vichy government’s policy on
Joliot-Curie, Frédéric
Joly, Monsieur
Julius Ewest wine company
Jünger, Ernst
Kedward, H. R.
Kir, Félix
Kircher, Gertrude
Klaebisch, Otto
trial of
weinführer assignment
Kristallnacht
Kuehn wine firm
Kühnemann, Captain Ernst
Langlade, General Paul de
Lanson Père & Fils
Lapierre, Dominique
Latour, Louis (elder)
Latour, Louis (younger)
Laval, Pierre
Lawton, Daniel
Lawton, Hugues
Le Brun, Monsieur
Leclerc, General Philippe
Lencquesaing, May-Eliane Miailhe de
Lévéjac, Pierre
Louis XI, King of France
Louis XIV, King of France
Lur–Saluces, Marquis Bertrand de
MacArthur, General Douglas
Mâconnais wines
Maginot Line
Maison Eschenauer
Maison Joseph Drouhin
Maître de Maison de Sa Cave à Sa Table, Le (Ribaud)
Martin, St.
Masson, Gaston
McClelland, Lieutenant William T
Miailhe, Edouard
Miailhe, Jean
copper sulfate production
Miailhe, Louis
Miailhe, René
Miailhe family
Bömers’s dealings with
German takeover of vineyards
Jews, hiding of
winemaking business
Milice paramilitary police force
Mirepoix, Hubert de
Moët & Chandon
Resistance movement, involvement in
Molotov cocktails
Monmousseaux, Jean and Armand
Monnet, Jean
Monsabert, General Lucien de
Morgan, J. Pierpont
Mothe, Florence
Mussolini, Benito
Négociants
Nonancourt, Bernard de
Eagle’s Nest wine cache, discovery of
family winemaking business
on Klaebisch
postwar fortunes
Resistance movement, involvement in
Nonancourt, Marie-Louise Lanson de
Nonancourt, Maurice de
Norman, Remington
Operation Anvil
Operation Overlord
Papen, Franz von
Paris
Germans’ plans for destruction of
Germans’ use of
Halle aux Vins, bombing of
Patton, General George
Paxton, Robert O.
Payne, Robert
Pétain, Marshal Philippe
blame for French defeat
collaboration, encouragement of
collaboration trial
public attitude toward
vineyard given to
as wine enthusiast
See also Vichy government
Phylloxera epidemic
Piper-Heidsieck Champagne
Pol Roger
Poniatowski, Prince Philippe
Potato bugs (doryphores)
Prisoner-of-war life
D-Day action, monitoring of
escape from prison
hunger problem
letters from home
march into Germany
release from prison
reunions of prisoners
in slave-labor camps
wine fête
writing about wine and food
Pruning of vines
Rappeneau, Georges
Resistance movement
Allied airmen smuggled out of France
BBC broadcasts and
Bordeaux activities
cattle-rustling
collaborators, execution of
cynicism of the people and
Drouhin’s involvement
German campaign against
German/Vichy wine policy and
gun-running
military intelligence based on wine shipments
Moët & Chandon’s involvement
Nonancourt’s involvement
Paris activities
smuggling men across Demarcation Line
spying operations
student
riots
subtle protests by ordinary people
winemakers’ involvement
See also Hiding, fibbing and fobbing off campaign
Revolte, Paulette
Reynaud, Paul
Ribaud, Roger
Ribbentrop, Joachim von
wine trade, connection to
Ricciuti, Al
Rolin, Nicolas
Rommel, General Erwin
Roosevelt, Franklin
Rothenburg, seige of
Rothschild, Alain de
Rothschild, Baroness Philippine de
Rothschild, Baron Philippe de
Rothschild, Baron Robert de
Rothschild, Elie de
Rothschild, Eric de
Royan, liberation of
Russian front
Sabbe, René
St. Julien sisters
Salon champagne house
Schÿler, Jean-Henri
Segnitz, Adolph
weinführer assignment
Segnitz, Hermann
Senard, Daniel
Service du Travail Obligatoire (STO)
Shortage of wine and food
copper sulfate production for
winemaking
gardening as remedy for
German requisitions as cause of
malnutrition problem
markets and
nonstandard foods
potato bug invasion
transportation problems and
wine allowances, proposals for
wine production, drop in
Simon, André
Slave-labor camps
Société des Grands Vins Français
Speer, Albert
SS
Stein, Gertrude
Student riots
Suarez d’Aulan, Ghislaine
Suarez d’Aulan, Marquis
Swan, J. R.
Syndicat des Grandes Marques de Champagne
Tâche, La (wine)
Taittinger, Claude
Taittinger, François
Taittinger, Guy
Taittinger, Pierre
Terrail, André
Terrail, Claude
Thirty Years’ War
Tour d’Argent, La (restaurant)
Tridon, Yvonne
Vaughan-Thomas, Wynford
Vavasseur, Charles
Vesselle, George
Veuve Laurent-Perrier & Cie
Vichy government
authority given to
forced labor program
formation of
headquarters for
hiding, fibbing and fobbing off campaign, participation in
Jews, policy on
popular support for
public’s disillusionment with
reactionary policies
See also German/Vichy wine policy
Vic-sur-Seille wine
Villaine, Aubert de
Vogüé, Bertrand de
Vogüé, Ghislain de
Vogüé, Count Robert-Jean de
arrest of
Klaebisch’s dealings with
Klaebisch’s trial
Resistance movement, involvement in
slave-labor camp experience
Volnay Champans wine
Wales, Prince of
Waterloo, battle of
Waugh, Harry
Weinführers
accomplishments of
Bömers’s work in Bordeaux
Klaebisch’s work in Champagne
mission of
postwar trials of
Segnitz’s work in Burgundy
West, Sergeant Major Virgil
Wine
French identity, importance to
German leadership’s appreciation for
information contained in
war, historical connection to
Wine fête for prisoners of war
Winemaking
clarifying process
“controlled place of origin” system
copper sulfate used in
crisis conditions in 1939
drop in production during war years
miserable conditions between the wars
modernization movement
pruning of vines
traditional methods
wolves and
Winemaking’s postwar recovery
Clos du Maréchal property
cost of
damage of war years
erasing the scars of occupation
government assistance
harvest of 1945
hidden wines, recovery and sale of
replacement of old and sick vines
weather problems of 1945
wine celebrations, resumption of
Wolves of Burgundy
World War I
hiding wines from Germans
human toll of
looting of wine stocks
soldier’s experience
wine for soldiers
winemaking, impact on
World War II
bombing of Germany
Jews, German campaign against
onset of
Phony War period
Russian front
wine for soldiers
See also Allied invasion of Europe;
German occupation of France;
Prisoner-of-war life
Zoll, André
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Don and Petie Kladstrup are writers who divide their time between Paris and Normandy, France. Don is a former television news correspondent and the recipient of numerous awards for his work overseas. His wife, Petie, a former protocol officer for the U.S. ambassador to UNESCO, is a freelance writer who has written widely about France and French life. When they are not writing, the Kladstrups are busy restoring an eighteenth-century farm and replanting an orchard with rare varieties of apples that are in danger of extinction. From time to time, they also take in a wine auction or two in the countryside. They are the parents of two daughters.
Wine and War: The French, the Nazis, and the Battle for France's Greatest Treasure Page 32