Louis XIII is a cognac.
Louis XIII is the most representative wine of Remy Martin, and Remy Martin is one of the oldest cognac brands in France. Louis XIII uses high-quality grapes from the Cognac region as raw materials and is aged. It is blended from 1,200 kinds of eaux-de-vie, and the aging time reaches 50 years or even longer. Remy Martin is one of the oldest cognac brands in France, and its most representative wine is undoubtedly Louis XIII.
In 1724, Remy Martin was officially founded by Remy Martin, which has a history of nearly 300 years. The foreign name of Remy Martin is taken from the name of the founder, while the Chinese name is taken from the Greek mythological image of Remy Martin, which is also the brand logo of Remy Martin. Rémy Martin is the only well-known Cognac brand produced and operated by locals in the Cognac region, and Rémy Martin is one of the few Cognac brands that grows its own grapes.
Related birth
Louis XIII was born in 1874. Its history can be traced back to 1850, when Paul Emile, the son of the third generation of Remy Martin, bought it. A Renaissance Baroque wine bottle was found on the ancient battlefield of the Louis XIII era near Jarnac. The royal fleur-de-lys decoration on the bottle represents the noble lintel that the bottle once belonged to the royal family. Paul patented a copy and named it Louis XIII.
In 1874, he officially registered the Sagittarius constellation logo and the Louis XIII wine bottle as company trademarks. Thus began the era of Louis XIII. Louis XIII only uses high-quality grapes from the Grand Champagne region in the heart of the Cognac region of France for aging for at least 50 years. Each bottle of fine wine embodies the centuries-old exquisite skills of four generations of winemakers.