The #Pompeii Foro Boario vineyard opposite the amphitheatre is beautiful, but less known is the #Roman winemaking facility from 79 CE hidden in a small building at the back corner!
Almost always closed to the public, here’s a glimpse… 🧵 1/8
The vineyard entrance leads immediately into the small ‘cella vinaria’, with 10 ceramic dolia buried in the ground to keep a stable, cool fermentation and storage environment.
Even the specific ‘strawberry’ shape of dolia helps must circulate & aids fermentation. 2/8
Some amazing details have been preserved: plastered channels leading from the press room into the cella vinaria, and smaller lead pipes leading through walls and into each jar. 3/8
There are signs of repair and reuse via lead clamps on dolia, and stamps indicating the workshops and makers of the jars. Dolia were expensive so had long and often complex use lifecycles, sometimes reused for 300+ years. 4/8
In the room immediately next door is the press - destroyed in the eruption, but beautifully and accurately reconstructed as a lever and winch type (nb. it could also have functioned with a screw and weightstone). 5/8
Grapes were first trod on the waterproofed plaster floor, then pressed under the lever, with must flowing into two collection vats on the left.
When ready, the collected must was channeled next door into the dolia for longer fermentation and storage. 6/8
Production on this relatively small scale AND within an urban environment is fascinating, presenting a very diff case to the more stereotypical villa rustica style (cf. image of industrial production at Villa Pisanella. 📷 1903 excavations, M. Cardone and PompeiiInPictures). 7/8
Triclinia in the vineyard itself, a shopfront and a location next to the amphitheatre suggest that this owner had a thriving business selling wine on a local scale to patrons of gladiatorial games and passers by. 8/8
(📷 Mastroberardino)
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The first attempt to combine all disparate forms of evidence in Italy, we start pre-Roman. Localised grape exploitation and experimentation probably occurred to a greater extent in Italy than historically accepted, alongside Caananite, Phoenician and Greek influence. /2
The latest evidence indicates vine cultivation increasingly likely from the Final Bronze Age, & exploitation of various forms present perhaps as early as the Neolithic. The paper aims to reframe these terms in a consistently rigorous manner with multidisciplinary datasets. /3
There is some great evidence emerging for local Bronze Age #viticulture and winemaking on peninsular #Italy - long before the traditionally accepted “Phoenician and Greek introduction”. 🍇🍷
A #thread on recent evidence supporting local Italian expertise... 🧵
Early evidence for wild grapevine and grape consumption appears at Epigravettian and #Mesolithic Grotta del Romito (Calabria) and Torre Canne (Apulia).
Localised domestication may have occurred in Neolithic S Italy and pollen indicates possible early grapevine cultivation c. 2000 BCE in the Massaciuccoli Basin, Tuscany.
While variable, most modern dry wines typically have an alcohol concentration of 10-14%.
Ancient wines were made with wild yeast - blowing around the vineyard & found on the skins of grapes. 2/
Many wild yeast strains are unable to continue converting to alcohol above 6%. Other yeasts then kick in.
The most favourable type of yeast to produce reliable & consistently good alcohol/wine is Saccharomyces cerevisiae - what most modern wines are inoculated with. 3/