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The History of Wine

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The History of Wine Wine in the Ancient World Earliest Evidence is from the Neolithic Era 8000-45000BC Hajji Firuz Site found in Zargos Mountains in Iran Neolithic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The History of Wine


1
The History of Wine
2
Wine in the Ancient World
  • Earliest Evidence is from the Neolithic Era
  • 8000-45000BC
  • Hajji Firuz Site found in Zargos Mountains in
    Iran
  • Neolithic community kitchen found pot with wine
    resign
  • Pot dated to 6000BC

3
Wine in the Ancient World
  • Early Mesopotamia Wine Culture (Late Uruk Period
    3500-3100BC)
  • Class War Between Beer and Wine Begins
  • An impression of a seal from Queen Pu-abls tomb
    shows a male and female on either side of a
    wide-mouthed jar are shown drinking barley beer
    through tubes, while others below raise high
    their cups, probably containing wine, which is
    served from a spouted jar.

4
Wine in the Ancient World
  • Egyptians began Modern Viticultural Techniques
  • Clay pots found during 1st and 2nd Dynasties with
    wine residue
  • 3rd Dynasty Hieroglyphics show vine trellis
    training
  • Many tombs from then on were decorated with
    viticultural and winemaking scenes

5
Wine in the Ancient World
  • Beginnings Locations of Wine
  • From Phoenicians and other traders spread wine
    throughout the Mediterranean

6
Wine in the Ancient World
  • Ancient Greece plants Vineyards throughout the
    Southern Europe
  • As far as Modern Spain
  • Roman Empire conquers most of known world and
    plant vineyards for local governors
  • Roman Empire Converts to Catholicism
  • Priests increase already large production to
    convert population to Catholicism

7
Wine in European History
  • Monks during the Dark Ages Maintain Winemaking
  • In fact increases as Pilgrimages increased
  • The reign of Charlemagne revived winemaking and
    advanced the technique
  • Wine becomes a primary beverage with periodic
    problems with drinking water from the 14th to the
    16th Century.
  • The monk Dom Perignon accidentally invents
    Champagne in 17th Century
  • Robert Hooke 1664 and Antoni van Leeuwenhoek 1684
  • Louis Pasteur discovered the role of Yeast in
    Fermentation 1860
  • Phylloxera nearly wipes out nearly every vineyard
    in the late 19th Century

8
Early Vines in the New World
  • Viking, Leif Erikson, arrive in 1000AD and notes
    the existence of enormous grape vines
  • 1524 Giovanni Verrano notes wild vines in North
    Carloina and their wine potential
  • French Huguenots in Florida make wine from Vitis
    rotundifola in the mid 16th Century
  • Captin John Smith notes Foxy grapes and their
    potential for Sherry in 17th Century
  • In the 17th Century Samuel de Champlain notes
    islands on the St. Lawrence overgrown with vines

9
Failed Attempts with Vitis vinfera in the New
World
  • Lord Delaware brings French Viticulturists to
    plant vinifera varieties in the 1620s
  • Governor John Winthrop of Massachusetts (18th
    Century)
  • Governor's Island
  • Lord Baltimore in Maryland (18th Century)
  • William Penn near Philadelphia (18th Century)
  • Abraham de Lyon of Portugal planted a large
    vineyard in Savannah Georgia in 1730
  • King Charles II planted vines in Rhode Island
  • Pierre Lagaux Builds 1st Commercial Winery near
    Philadelphia in 1793

10
Thomas Jefferson and His Passion for Wine
  • As Ambassador to France he gained an appreciation
    for French Wine
  • While he cultivated native vines, he drank French
    wines
  • Selected French Wines for President Washington
  • Maintained the Presidential wine cellar for John
    Adams, his administration, and continued for
    Madison and Monroe.
  • Jefferson after unsuccessfully planting vinifera
    varieties, he later finds Alexander and Catawba

11
New Attempts Find a Viable Native Varieties
  • John Alexander successfully cultivates a Vitis
    labrusca variety later to be known as Alexander
    in late 1700s
  • Jean Jacques Dufour Swiss native who planted
    Alexander vine in Indiana and created Little
    Rhineland
  • John Adlum of Georgetown plants another labrusca
    variety Catawba
  • Jean Jacques founds Brotherhood Winery in New
    York
  • Oldest remaining Winery (Founded 1816)
  • Nicholas Longworth built a winery in Cincinnati
    in 1820s
  • Made first American sparkling wine
  • Longfellows Ode to Catawba Wine

12
Wine goes West
  • Pope Alexander VI recognizes California in 1493
  • Spanish Conquistadors arrive in 1542 and 1602
  • Vineyards planted in both encounters
  • King of Spain terminates all plantings in 1595
    (150 years)
  • Franciscan Monks continue to plant for
    sacramental wine
  • Padre Juan Ugarte at Xavier Mission in Baja
  • Padre Junipero Serra and Gaspar De Portola begin
    missions throughout California coast in 1769
  • Gold Rush brings on new varieties
  • Agoston Haraszthy brings 300 new vinifera
    Varieties

13
Wine and Prohibition
  • Prohibitionists gradually gain power
  • from mid 19th Century
  • Maine is a Prohibitionist State 1846
  • Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Vermont in 1852
  • Drys begin to publish propaganda U.S.
    Parmacopoeia
  • 1917 WWI and 33 states go Dry
  • National Prohibition (Volstead Act of 1920
  • Only Sacramental and Family use keep wine alive
  • Act Repealed in 1933 but Wine Industry is Ruin

14
ZinfandelAmericas Grape
15
A Zinful Past
  • Not much was known until the past 20 yrs
  • Believed Agoston Haraszthy brought it to CA
  • due claims by Agostons son Arpad
  • Records show imported to Long Island (1829)
  • Found Zinfandal and Zenfandel in Boston
  • Known to exist in CA in 1852
  • Dominate Red Varietal (1859)
  • Reported as a Claret Varietal in 1862
  • Sonoma Horticultural Society

16
A Zinful Past
  • Discovered same as Black St. Peters
  • Phyloxera in 1890s Prohibition in 1920
  • The Scientific Revolution in CA Wine
  • Zinfandel as a Provincial Red Varietal
  • The Development of Zin Styles (60s and 70s)
  • White Zinfandel saves Old Vines
  • The Resurgence in popularity 1990s
  • 20K acres 1970, 34K 1990, 50K 1997

17
Zinfandel Historys Mystery
  • Initially assumed to be a Hungarian Variety
  • Then amphelograpy linked it to Primitivo
  • Then thought to be linked to Plavac Mali
  • DNA fingerprinting confirmed Zinfandel is
    genetically similar to Primitivo
  • New studies link Zinfandel to Croatian
    Variety Crljenak
  • Now What?
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