Though no longer the rich city of its nineteenth-century heyday, run-down BéZIERS is still the capital of the Languedoc wine country and a focus for the Occitan movement, as well as being the birthplace of Resistance hero Jean Moulin. If you are looking for a Béziers hotel, have a look at this website. The fortunes of the movement and the vine have long been closely linked; Occitan activists have helped to organize the militant local vine-growers, and there were ugly events during the mid-1970s, when blood was shed in violent confrontations with the authorities over the importation of cheap foreign wines and the low prices paid for the essentially poor-grade local product. Things are calmer now, as the conservatism of Languedoc farmers has given way to more modern attitudes in the face of public demand for something better than the traditional table wine. As a result, some of the steam has also gone out of the movement; interest today is more in the culture than in anti-Paris separatist feelings. the town is also home to two great Languedocian adopted traditions: English rugby and the Spanish corrida, both of which it follows with a passion. The best time to visit is during the mid-August feria, a raucous four-day party which can be enjoyed even if bullfighting isn't to your taste. Pages in section ‘Béziers’: The City, Practicalities, Pézenas.
Alternate spellings:: France, Béziers, Béziers, Beziers
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