Wine History
In order to follow the distribution of the vine and winemaking from the
very beginning until now, we must follow a winding path. It is not
always easy, as this development stretches over a period of nearly 7000
years. Few facts are known about the early years. However, it is
generally accepted that wine was made for the first time in Asia Minor,
especially in the Caucasus and Mesopotamia, about 6000 to 4000 B.C. From
there winemaking spread to Egypt, where written references about wine
have been found to wine dating back to 5000 B.C. At about that same
time, they began winemaking in Phoenicia. By 2000 R.C., the Greeks and
the Cretans also began producing wine and the Cretans especially became
famous for exporting quality wine.
By 1000 B.C. the inhabitants of Sicily, Italy and most countries in
North Africa had begun planting vineyards, and 500 years later wine
production spread to Spain, the south of France and Arabia. In about 100
B.C., wine was also made in Northern India and China. Shortly after the
birth of Christ the practice spread to the Balkan States and Northern
Europe.
The history of wine virtually ground to a halt for the next 1000 years.
The decline of the Roman Empire and Europe's Dark Ages curtailed the
development of wine. Explorers in the 16th century accelerated the pace
and by 1530 the vine had spread to Mexico and Japan. Thirty years later
Argentina imported the vine, followed a short while later by Peru. The
next milestone was the planting of vineyards at the Cape in 1655.
California followed in 1697 and Australia and New Zealand in 1813.
The development of wine cultivation has over the years gone hand in hand
with the spread of civilisation. When one looks back at the early days
of the vine and its product, it is obvious that while winemaking methods
and advanced techniques produced different styles of wine, the basic
principles have changed very little. It is interesting to note that
viticulturists selected and propagated varieties thousands of years ago.
They understood cloning techniques and made distinctive and excellent
wines for export. The ancient Greeks had no fewer than 18 adjectives to
describe wine and the Romans made more than 80 styles. Some Roman wines
were apparently still drinkable after being stored for 200 years. They
developed many of the sophisticated viti- and vinicultural techniques
still in use today.