Rhône Valley and Southern France

Table of Contents
  1. Rhône Valley
  2. The Northern Rhône
  3. The Southern Rhône
  4. Provence and Corsica
  5. Languedoc-Roussillon
  6. Southwestern France and the Dordogne
  7. Review Quizzes

The Rhône Valley

The Rhône Valley in France is overwhelmingly devoted to red wine production.

While the Rhône River is dotted with vineyards from its headwaters in Switzerland to its mouth on the French Mediterranean coast, the Rhône Valley properly refers to two clusters of appellations along the banks of the river in Southern France. The Northern Rhône, or Rhône septentrionale, occupies a narrow band of vineyards hugging the river just south of Beaujolais, from Vienne to Valence. The vineyards of the Southern Rhône, or Rhône méridionale, funnel outward south of Montélimar toward Avignon, near the river’s Mediterranean basin. While these two separate stretches are often considered collectively, the Northern and Southern Rhône are climatically and viticulturally distinct.

The Rhône Valley and its environs boast a long history of enological importance. The introduction of winemaking in France can be traced to the Greeks, who established vine cultivation at their Massalia settlement—modern-day Marseilles—in approximately 600 BCE. At the height of Greek trade, some 10 million liters of wine in amphorae were shipped through Massalia into the heart of Gaul via the Rhône River. The Romans continued this trend with their arrival in the Southern Rhône in 125 BCE, and viticulture spread to the Northern Rhône by the first century CE. The Northern Rhône’s picturesque, hallmark terraces were first constructed by Roman workers. Vienne evolved as an important Roman provincial capital, and the Viennese vinum picatum, or "pitched wine," was exported to Rome itself. Whether vinum picatum was simply a reference to the wine’s character resulting from its mode of transport

Comments
Parents
  • I'd love to see on this page a quick mention of Estaing next to Marcillac as another (now AOP, formerly VDQS) appellation that is based on Fer Servadou.  I admit though that this is a personal love because I have a friend who owns a house very near the Co-op in Estaing, and so I drink the wines regularly.  I have no idea if they are available commercially in the US, I suspect not as I've never seen any.  On the other hand I think it would be of good use to mention Picpoul in the discussion of Languedoc AOP.  Fran Kysela, MS, and others import thousands of cases of Picpoul de Pinet and the wines have a following especially in DC and NY.

Comment
  • I'd love to see on this page a quick mention of Estaing next to Marcillac as another (now AOP, formerly VDQS) appellation that is based on Fer Servadou.  I admit though that this is a personal love because I have a friend who owns a house very near the Co-op in Estaing, and so I drink the wines regularly.  I have no idea if they are available commercially in the US, I suspect not as I've never seen any.  On the other hand I think it would be of good use to mention Picpoul in the discussion of Languedoc AOP.  Fran Kysela, MS, and others import thousands of cases of Picpoul de Pinet and the wines have a following especially in DC and NY.

Children
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