The northerly winemaking regions of Germany straddle the 50th parallel and are amongst the world’s coolest vineyards.
Nonetheless, vine cultivation dates to the ancient world—wild vines had been growing on the upper Rhine previously, but Vitis vinifera arrived in Germany with the Romans. Near the end of the 3rd century, Emperor Probus overturned Domitian’s 92 CE ban on new vineyard plantings, and viticulture followed the Romans into provinces north of the Alps. By the fourth century winemaking was definitively established along the steep slopes of the Mosel River. Charlemagne, the legendary beard-stained lover of wine—whose newly minted Carolingian calendar replaced the Roman October with Windume-Manoth, “the month of the vintage”—introduced vine cultivation east of the Rhine River in the late eighth century. During the Middle Ages, the Church was instrumental in shepherding the development of vineyards, and many of Germany’s modern einzellagen (vineyards) owe their nomenclature to monastic influence. As in France, the Church essentially operated its own feudal economy: it collected a tithe, or tax, from the parishioners who worked the vineyards, and wine made a suitable substitute for cash. The Cistercians of Burgundy founded the famous Kloster Eberbach monastery in the Rheingau in 1136, where they amassed the largest vineyard holdings in Europe by the end of the Middle Ages, with over 700 acres of vines. The walled Steinberg vineyard, an ortsteil within the commune of Hattenheim, was the monks’ centerpiece and remains wholly intact today—an alleinbesitz (monopole) of Kloster Eberbach for over eight centuries
Strohwein has a KMW of 25 - is that at harvest or after the grapes have been dried for 3 months?
Hello, I love these study guides, thank you! I was thinking it is a bit confusing reading about the Danube in regards to Wagram and Wien. The sentence seems to imply the Danube flows West into the Wagram "as it passes out of Vienna", as opposed to the path it travels from the Black Forest in Germany, through ten countries (most of any river in the world!) and 1,777 miles into the Black Sea. What a ride.
Thank you!
Franz Künstler estate was founded in Hocheim in 1965, not 1956 as written in the Rheingau section of the study guide above. The family itself has wine making experience dating back to 1648 in what is presently the Czech Republic
Gemeinde is not a Village, it refers to a township, commune or even a parrish. A Village in German is Dorf.
They wrote Federspiel is Falcon's tool, this is not the case. In reality refers to Falconry, the medieval sport of training a bird of prey to fly free, hunt, and then return. It is a traditional sport of the Wachau.