Greece and Eastern Europe

Contents

  1. Greece
  2. Hungary
  3. Bulgaria
  4. Romania
  5. Slovenia and Croatia
  6. Czech Republic and Slovakia
  7. The Russian Federation
  8. Former Soviet Republics
  9. Review Quizzes

Greece

In its infancy, wine was produced in regions where the vine grew wild. From its origins in the Near East, cultivation of the grapevine spread to the Old Kingdom of Egypt, and, around 2500 BCE, the vine was brought, via trade, to the Minoan Bronze Age civilization of Crete.

Despite Crete’s latitude, the islands moderate climate proved suitable for the vine, and in viticulture the Minoans surpassed all their contemporaries. (They also developed indoor plumbing—clearly a civilization ahead of the times.) The practice was passed to their successors, the Mycenaeans, to other islands in the Aegean, and to the mainland of Greece. The Greeks spread cultivation of the vine throughout much of Europe. The first vineyards in France were in Massalia, a Greek colony at modern-day Marseilles, and Southern Italy’s modern varieties Greco and Aglianico may be Greek in origin. The Greeks took viticulture northward as well, to the banks of the Danube and the coastline of the Black Sea. Ultimately, the Greeks were responsible for not only spreading the vine geographically but also democratizing the consumption of wine. In ancient Egypt, wine was regarded as the sweat of the sun god Ra; the Greeks drank wine at religious and ceremonial events, but they also drank socially. As wine consumption in Greece spread to new social classes, additional vineyards were needed. The Romans carried the Greeks’ vines even farther, but the tradition of many modern-day European wine regions extends back to ancient Greece.

While preeminent in the ancient world, Greek wines languished until a late 20th-century surge in interest and quality. Greece’s vinous reputation had long been rooted in retsina, an aromatized wine flavored with Aleppo pine resin. Wine was transported through ancient Greece in amphorae, often sealed

Comments
Anonymous
  • Looks like we need to update the Crimea to Russia now.

  • Hi, I learn about Hungary and I read here that ''containers called puttony—puttonyos is an adjective rather than the plural form—which hold roughly 25 kg''. But reading The World Atlas of Wine last edition, on page 258 it says that a 'puttonyos' is 20kg, same on the Royal Tokaji website.  Is 20 or 25 kg for a puttonyos?  And regarding the use of 5 or 6 puttonyos is it still used or not? Some say that only 3, 4 puttonyos was abolished in 2013, here is mentioned  that the whole system 3-6 is beaing replaced by Aszu term. Could you help me with thsi information please? Thank you

  • Hi, I learn about Hungary and I read here that ''containers called puttony—puttonyos is an adjective rather than the plural form—which hold roughly 25 kg''. But reading The World Atlas of Wine last edition, on page 258 it says that a 'puttonyos' is 20kg, same on the Royal Tokaji website.  Is 20 or 25 kg for a puttonyos?  And regarding the use of 5 or 6 puttonyos is it still used or not? Some say that only 3, 4 puttonyos was abolished in 2013, here is mentioned  that the whole system 3-6 is beaing replaced by Aszu term. Could you help me with thsi information please? Thank you

  • Hi everyone! Good maps about Hungary!

    www.fomi.hu/.../vingis-oem-ofj-terkepek

  • This sentence from the second paragraph needs correcting.  "The first vineyards in France were in Massalia, a Greek colony at modern-day Marseilles, and Southern Italy’s modern varieties Greco and Aglianico are may be Greek in origin."