Decanter Magazine - the route to all good wine

Latest issue
Subscribe
Renew online
Buy Decanter:
In the UK
In the US
Find your nearest
UK newsagent

News Alerts
Keep up to date with news alerts and newsletters including decantertrade
Enter your email address:
Shopping Mall

Retailers
UK and Europe
Worldwide
Shopping
Property
Recruitment
Books
Accessories & Gifts
Storage & Refrigeration
Tourism

Learning Route
Free tasting kit
Links
Wine courses
Wine clubs
The basics
Wine terminology - grapes
How do they taste?
Glossary
Wine Investment
Features
2007 Harvest reports
Book reviews
Richard Mayson's Alentejo diary
Am I a great vintage?
Bordeaux En Primeur
Burgundy 2006
Other Features
Events reports
Events slideshows
Decanter contributors
RSS Feed
Latest News

Tutankhamen drank red wine: proof
October 27, 2005

Natasha Hughes

Red wine was cultivated and consumed nearly 3,500 years ago - and Tutankhamen took it with him on his journey to the afterlife, a team of Spanish scientists has conclusively proved.

Although it has long been known that wine was enjoyed around the Mediterranean basin during the Neolithic period, until now scientists have been unable to determine what kinds of wine were favoured by the people of the world's first civilisations.

Now Dr Maria-Rosa Guasch-Jané, a scientist from Barcelona University's Department of Nutrition and Food Science, has proved that amphorae found in the tomb of King Tutankhamen contain syringic acid, a product of the pigments found in red wine.

Guasch-Jané first had to prove that the wines stored in the amphorae discovered in a variety of different burial chambers were made from grapes.

Basing her research on the residue found in five amphorae, a couple of which can be dated back to the First Dynasty (around 3000 BC), she used a combination of liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry to prove that the deposits contained tartrate crystals, which are only found in wines based on grapes.

Having established that, she then went on to look for the presence of syringic acid. While most of the deposits in her five amphorae were too degraded by time to offer up any conclusive results, Guasch-Jan was successful with the amphorae in the tomb of Tutankhamen, who ruled between 1334 and 1325 BC. The discovery of syringic acid confirms that the wine stored in the huge jars was indeed red.

Her research also confirms the hypothesis that red wines were associated with the cult of Osiris, whose death and rebirth was symbolically celebrated each year when the floodwaters of the Nile ran red with alluvial soils. By extension, red wines were prestige goods, fit only for gods, kings and the higher ranks of Egyptian society.

And wine was taken seriously. 'The jars were labelled with product, year, source and even the name of the vine grower, but they did not mention the colour of the wines they contained,' Guasch-Jané said.

The research was funded by the Spanish Foundation for the Culture of Wine, whose members come from five of Spain's most prestigious bodegas: Vega Sicilia, Julian Chivite, Codorniu, Marques de Riscal and Rioja Alta.

Register on decanter.com absolutely free for news alerts delivered direct to your email inbox, and our fortnightly newsletter with advance notice of what’s coming up in Decanter magazine, offers, competitions and more.

PLUS registration is a one-stop shop for the Decanter magazine Archive and Decanter Fine Wine Tracker.

Search for similar news stories

Back to index

Advertisements
Shopping directory
Poll
Is there too much Bordeaux coverage in Decanter?
To comment on this month's poll email editor@decanter.com

Members Log in

Username
Password
keep me signed in unless I sign out

Register free Forgot password?

Decanter worldwide

Chinese
Hungarian

Sister sites

House to Home
Country Life
Horse & Hound
The Field
Shooting UK
Homes & Gardens
Ideal Home
Yachting and Boating World
All IPC Media sites

Contact Us

Editorial...support...
sales...marketing...
Decanter media pack

Contact us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Trusted Reviews
© Copyright 2007 IPC Media Limited, All rights reserved