Argers
Argers is a commune in the Marne department in northeastern France.| Tap on a place to explore it |
Photo: Gérald Garitan, CC BY-SA 4.0.
- Type: Locality with 115 residents
- Description: commune in Marne, France
- Also known as: “51015”
Places of Interest
Highlights include Église Saint-Martin de Dommartin-Dampierre and Église Saint-Pierre d’Argers.
Église Saint-Martin de Dommartin-Dampierre
Church
Église Saint-Julien à Élise
Church
Photo: Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Église Saint-Julien à Élise is a church.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Sainte-Menehould and Dommartin-Dampierre.
Sainte-Menehould
Village
Photo: Ketounette, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Sainte-Menehould is a commune in the Marne department in north-eastern France. The 18th-century French playwright Charles-Georges Fenouillot de Falbaire de Quingey died in Sainte-Ménéhould. Sainte-Menehould is situated 4 km northeast of Argers.
Dommartin-Dampierre
Village
Photo: WCOMFR, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Dommartin-Dampierre is a commune in the Marne department in north-eastern France.
Argers
- Category: commune of France
- Location: Arrondissement of Châlons-en-Champagne, Marne, Grand Est, France, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
This page is based on GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Argers from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Afrikaans to Zulu—“Argers” goes by many names.
- Afrikaans: “Argers”
- Albanian: “Argers”
- Aragonese: “Argers”
- Arpitan: “Argers”
- Asturian: “Argers”
- Bambara: “Argers”
- Basque: “Argers”
- Bavarian: “Argers”
- Breton: “Argers”
- Cajun French: “Argers”
- Catalan: “Argers”
- Cebuano: “Argers”
- Chechen: “АгӀже”
- Chinese: “Argers”
- Chinese: “阿尔热”
- Chinese: “阿爾熱”
- Corsican: “Argers”
- Croatian: “Argers”
- Czech: “Argers”
- Danish: “Argers”
- Dutch: “Argers”
- Esperanto: “Argers”
- Estonian: “Argers”
- Faroese: “Argers”
- Finnish: “Argers”
- French: “Argers”
- Friulian: “Argers”
- Galician: “Argers”
- German: “Argers”
- Hungarian: “Argers”
- Icelandic: “Argers”
- Ido: “Argers”
- Indonesian: “Argers”
- Interlingua: “Argers”
- Interlingue: “Argers”
- Irish: “Argers”
- Italian: “Argers”
- Jamaican Creole English: “Argers”
- Kabyle: “Argers”
- Kalaallisut: “Argers”
- Kongo: “Argers”
- Kurdish: “Argers”
- Ladin: “Argers”
- Latin: “Argers”
- Latvian: “Argers”
- Ligurian: “Argers”
- Limburgan: “Argers”
- Lithuanian: “Argers”
- Low German: “Argers”
- Luxembourgish: “Argers”
- Mainfränkisch: “Argers”
- Malagasy: “Argers”
- Malay: “Argers”
- Min Nan Chinese: “Argers”
- Minangkabau: “Argers”
- Narom: “Argers”
- Neapolitan: “Argers”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Argers”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Argers”
- Occitan (post 1500): “Argers”
- Papiamento: “Argers”
- Persian: “آرژی (کمون)”
- Persian: “آرژی”
- Picard: “Argers”
- Piemontese: “Argers”
- Polish: “Argers”
- Portuguese: “Argers”
- Prussian: “Argers”
- Romagnol: “Argers”
- Romanian: “Argers”
- Romansh: “Argers”
- Sardinian: “Argers”
- Scots: “Argers”
- Scottish Gaelic: “Argers”
- Serbian: “Argers”
- Serbian: “Arže”
- Serbian: “Арже”
- Serbian: “Аржи”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Argers”
- Sicilian: “Argers”
- Slovak: “Argers”
- Spanish: “Argers”
- Swahili: “Argers”
- Swedish: “Argers”
- Swiss German: “Argers”
- Tatar: “Арже”
- Tosk Albanian: “Argers”
- Turkish: “Argers”
- Ukrainian: “Арже”
- Uzbek: “Argers”
- Venetian: “Argers”
- Vietnamese: “Argers”
- Vlaams: “Argers”
- Volapük: “Argers”
- Walloon: “Argers”
- Waray (Philippines): “Argers”
- Welsh: “Argers”
- Wolof: “Argers”
- Zulu: “Argers”
- “Argers”
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as Argers and Dampierre-sur-Auve.
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Étang le Roi and Étang d’Élise.
Grand Est: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Strasbourg, Reims, Metz, and Nancy.
Curious Places to Discover
Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Argers”. Photo: Gérald Garitan, CC BY-SA 4.0.