Garrigue is a type of low, soft-leaved scrubland found around the Mediterranean Basin, generally near the seacoast. Garrigue, which is a French term, is the most common term for such shrublands, which are known as phrygana in Greece, tomillares in Spain, and batha in Israel. Aromatic shrubs such as lavender, rosemary, and Artemisia are common garrigue plants. Scrubland is an uncultivated region covered with scrub vegetation. ... The Mediterranean Basin refers to the lands around and surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea. ... Species About 25-30, including: Lavandula angustifolia Lavandula canariensis Lavandula dentata Lavandula lanata Lavandula latifolia Lavandula multifida Lavandula pinnata Lavandula stoechas Lavandula viridis The lavenders Lavandula are a genus of about 25-30 species of flowering plants in the mint family, Lamiaceae, native from the Mediterranean region south to tropical... Binomial name Rosmarinus officinalis L. Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis L.) is a woody, perennial herb with fragrant evergreen needle-like leaves that are used in cooking. ... This article does not cite its references or sources. ...
The Marques de Garrigues, who has died aged 100, was, as Antonio Garrigues y Diaz-Canabate, Franco's ambassador to America during the presidency of John F Kennedy; he also served in the Republican government which preceded Franco's regime, and in the cabinet after the restoration of the monarchy.
Garrigues had been close to the Kennedys since Joe Kennedy, the future President's elder brother, visited Madrid during the Spanish Civil War, and he cemented the friendship during his time in Washington, when he regularly dined at the White House.
Antonio Garrigues y Diaz-Canabate was born in Madrid on January 9 1904, one of five sons of a prosperous lawyer who was widowed when Antonio was a boy.
Antonio Garrigues, who has died aged 100, was a unique figure in Spanish politics, holding high office under the republic in the 1930s, the Francoist dictatorship in the 1960s and the restored monarchy of King Juan Carlos in the 1970s.
In Spain, however, he was best known as the intimate friend of Jacqueline Kennedy; his silence on the nature of their relationship encouraged all sorts of rumours, but, whatever the truth, it is certain that he was a close friend to her after her husband's assassination in 1963.
Garrigues was appointed a minister not because of his lust for justice, but because, by then, he presided over the largest legal firm in Spain - some say in Europe - employing more than 1,000 lawyers in Madrid.