CAHORS
, on the River Lot, was the capital of the old province of Quercy. In its time, it has been a Gallic settlement; a Roman town; a briefly held Moorish possession; a town under English rule; a bastion of Catholicism in the Wars of Religion, sacked in consequence by Henri IV; a university town for four hundred years; and birthplace of the politician Léon Gambetta (1838-82), after whom so many French streets and squares are named. Modern Cahors is a sunny southern backwater, with... [More]
Ideally situated property in the Southern Quercy Périgord, just outside Cahors vineyards, close to Sarlat, Rocamadour, Toulouse, Carcassonne, Albi. Very quiet. Very good local food. [More]