Armenian find is 'world's oldest winery'
- Wednesday 12 January 2011
Dating to 6,100 years ago, the site includes a pressing vat, fermentation jars, a cup, drinking bowls, and the remains of crushed grapes, leaves and vines from Vitis vinifera.
The findings were published in the online edition of the Journal of Archaeological Science.
The site, Areni-1, ‘is distinct because the number and volume of the vessels found suggests wine was produced here in commercial qualities from domesticated grapes,’ according to Dr Boris Gasparian, one of the excavation's leaders.
The site pre-dates others in neighbouring Georgia, thought to be the world's oldest for wine production. The cave was discovered in 1997.
University of Pennsylvania professor Patrick McGovern, author of the 2010 book Uncorking the Past, who was not part of the research team told Decanter.com, ‘Areni looks like an extremely important site for early winemaking.’
Another scientist, Stefan K. Estreicher, of Texas Tech University and author of Wine: From Neolithic Times to the 21st Century, told the New York Times the Armenian discovery showed how important wine was to that society, as ‘they spent a lot of time and effort to build a facility to use only once a year’ when grapes were harvested.
It is thought that the wine would have been used for ritual purposes, as other evidence points to the cave being used for rituals by high-status individuals. Burial pits were discovered nearby and scientists suggest the wine would have been drunk to appease the dead, or sprinkled on the bodies during burial.
On a related note, Milan-based fashion designer Zorik Gharibian's 'Zorah' vineyards and winery, 4km away from the site in the village of Rind, harvested its first crop of a wine to be entitled '6000', a reference to its neighbour's age.

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Have your say!
Nona (HAYUHI)
March 18 12:35
Wonderful news, and great exploration! Respect and honor to people working on this project...
Karen
January 31 15:18
I find this a very interesting article. Thank you for sharing.
David Furer
January 14 15:52
Howard--I recall seeing a stone tablet at the British Museum depicting a barfly at the HG Hilton bearing a strong resemblance to you.
Hmm, but no, it couldn't be...
Howard G Goldberg, New York City
January 13 11:56
So the earliest primitive wine is 6,100 years old. Big deal. Both Carmel Palwin No 10 and and Manischewitz were bottled in Palestine 5,771 years ago.
Mel Brooks's 2,000-year-old man told me that his great-great grandfather tasted the Armenian wine as a nouveau and felt it had no future. But archeologists believe two cases of the Armenian wine were below decks on the Ark and still might be found in good condition on Mount Ararat. (Noah could not be reached for comment.)
I have it on good authority that King Nebuchadnezzar, after conquering Jerusalem and exiling the Jews, took a horde of large-format Palwin home to Babylon and named
the bottle size for himself. The wine was a smash hit at the Hanging Gardens Hilton.