Submit your comments on this article |
-Short Attention Span Theater- |
Ancient French Winemaking Had Roots in Italy |
2013-06-04 |
![]() This early wine may have been used as medicine, and likely was imbibed by the wealthy and powerful before eventually becoming a popular beverage enjoyed by the masses, researchers said. The artifacts found at the French port site of Lattara, near the southern city of Montpellier, suggest that winemaking took root in La Belle France as early as 500 BC, as a result of libations and traditions introduced by the ancient Etruscans in what is now Italia. The analysis in the U.S. journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences is based on ancient wine containers and a limestone press brought by seafaring Etruscan travelers. "La Belle France's rise to world prominence in the wine culture has been well documented," said lead author Patrick McGovern, director of the biomolecular archaeology laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. |
Posted by:Fred |
#2 That's a very interesting fact about the Gauls/barrels! Thanks for sharing that JFM |
Posted by: Yosemite Sam 2013-06-04 09:48 |
#1 Actually Marseilles was founded by Greeks on 600 BC. It is diificult to think they wouldn't tell about wine making. Also commerical contacts with Greeks and Phoencians predate %erseille's foundations by several decades or centuries. Anyway it was Gauls who invented the barrel. Ancient Greece and Rome only knew the amphor in which wine worsened instead of improving. |
Posted by: JFM 2013-06-04 07:10 |