Loire Zip code
People in France call it "the Loire." It is also the 171st longest river in the world. It is also the third-longest river in Europe, after the Danube and the Volga, after which it goes through Europe. As the longest river in France, it flows through 117,054 km2 (45,195 sq mi), which is more than a fifth of the country. It has a length of 1,006 km (625 mi), which means it drains more than half of France. Mont Gerbier de Jonc is a mountain in the Cevennes range in the Ardeche department of the French Massif Central. It is 4,430 ft (1,350 m) high. It flows north through Nevers to Orleans, then west through Tours and Nantes until it reaches the Atlantic Ocean at Saint-Nazaire. This river has many main tributaries. The main ones are the Nievre river on its right side, and the Maine river on its left side. Each of these six departments is named after a river that flows through them: the Loire. When UNESCO added it to its list of World Heritage Sites on December 2, 2000, the lower-central part of its valley that runs through the Pays and the Center-Val de Loire regions was added to the list, too. Vineyards and castles line the banks of the river in this part of France. They are a big draw for tourists. Some people think that the Middle Palaeolithic period of 90?40 kya (thousand years ago), followed by modern humans (about 30 kya), then the Neolithic period (6,000?4,500 BC), which is all of the Stone Age in Europe, began there. Then came the Gauls, the tribes that lived in the area during the Iron Age, which was from 1500 to 500 BC. Using pack horses, they used the Loire as a key trading route by 600 BC. This way, they could connect their trade with Phoenicia and Ancient Greece through Lyon on the Rhone River. Gallic rule in the valley came to an end in 56 BC, when Julius Caesar took over the nearby provinces for Rome. During the 3rd century AD, missionaries (many later called saints) came to this valley to convert the pagans to Christianity, and many were later called saints, too. In this time, people started growing grapes and making wine. The Loire Valley has been called the "Garden of France," and it's full of more than a thousand castles. Each one has a unique architectural style that ranges from the early mediaeval to the late Renaissance periods. As feudal strongholds, they were built for centuries in a strategic place between southern and northern France, but now they're mostly owned by people who live there. Named after the Gaulish (Celtic) name of the river, "Loire" comes from the Latin word "Liger." This word is a transcription of the Gaulish (Celtic) name of the river. The Gaulish name comes from the Gaulish word liga, which means "silt, sediment, deposit, alluvium." This word gave French lie, which in turn gave English lees, which in turn gave French lie, which in turn gave English lie. There are many words in English that come from the Proto-Indo-European root *legh- that mean "to lie, lay," like the Welsh word Lleyg, which also means "to lie." Liga comes from the same root as many other words in English.
Lucas Johnson
24 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honore
2380 Aboen
Loire France
![Loire France Postal code format](/public/zipcode-image-format-state/loire-france-zipcode-format.png)