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Also known as Lemòtges, Limòtges
französische Großstadt
Limoges is a city in west-central France that serves as the administrative center of the Haute-Vienne department and was formerly the capital of the Limousin region. The city is notable for its location on the river Vienne, which it historically served as the first fordable crossing point.
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via Open-Meteo
There is an adequate local and regional bus system for longer trips, operated by STCL. Walking is the obvious choice within the city centre.
Bridges of Saint Martial and St-Etienne Botanical gardens including Jardin botanique de l'Evêché and Jardin botanique alpin "Daniella" Chateau de La Borie is home to the Centre Culturel de Recontre de la Borie et l'Ensemble Baroque de Limoges Crypt of Saint Martial The Castle with 12-metre-high walls. The railway station, Gare de Limoges Bénédictins, inaugurated in 1929 and built in Byzantine style.
Limoges is the capital city of ceramic in France.
Travel guide from Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Limoges [liˈmɔʒ] (okzitanisch Limòtges, Aussprache: [leˈmɔt͡ʒes]) ist eine Stadt in Frankreich mit 130.876 Einwohnern (Stand 1. Januar 2019), gelegen am Fluss Vienne im nordwestlichen Zentralmassiv, Hauptstadt des Départements Haute-Vienne und der ehemaligen Region Limousin.
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).