Moët & Chandon
Moët & Chandon is a French champagne house founded in 1743, known for being the world’s most prestigious and best-selling champagne. The brand is famous for its signature Brut Impérial and for being the official champagne of celebrations, from royal courts to Hollywood award ceremonies.
Interesting fact: During World War II, the Moët & Chandon cellars in Épernay were used as a hiding place for priceless French art — including works from the Louvre. The Nazis never found them. But the most bizarre part? The house’s head cellarman at the time, a man named André Lhôte, was secretly sending coded messages to the French Resistance through the labels on champagne bottles. A single star on a label meant one thing; a different symbol meant another. The Germans drank the champagne while the Resistance read the bottles. To this day, those bottles are called “the silent messengers” of Champagne.
How to Pronounce Moët & Chandon Correctly


