Archaeologists Discover Largest, Oldest
Wine Cellar in Near East: 3,700 Year-Old Store Room Held 2,000 Liters of
Strong, Sweet Wine
Nov. 23, 2013 — Would you drink wine flavored with mint,
honey and a dash of psychotropic resins? Ancient Canaanites did more than 3,000
years ago.
Archaeologists have unearthed what may be the oldest -- and
largest -- ancient wine cellar in the Near East, containing forty jars, each of
which would have held fifty liters of strong, sweet wine. The cellar was
discovered in the ruined palace of a sprawling Canaanite city in northern
Israel, called Tel Kabri. The site dates to about 1,700 B.C. and isn't far from
many of Israel's modern-day wineries.
"This is a hugely significant discovery -- it's a wine cellar
that, to our knowledge, is largely unmatched in age and size," says Eric
Cline chair of the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Languages and
Civilizations of at The George Washington University. Cline and Assaf
Yasur-Landau, chair of the Department of Maritime Civilizations at the
University of Haifa, co-directed the excavation. Andrew Koh, assistant
professor of classical studies at Brandeis University, was an associate director.
The team's findings will be presented this Friday in Baltimore at
the annual meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research.
Koh, an archaeological scientist, analyzed the jar fragments using
organic residue analysis. He found molecular traces of tartaric and syringic
acid, both key components in wine, as well as compounds suggesting ingredients
popular in ancient wine-making, including honey, mint, cinnamon bark, juniper
berries and resins. The recipe is similar to medicinal wines used in ancient Egypt
for two thousand years.
Koh also analyzed the proportions of each diagnostic compound and
discovered remarkable consistency between jars.
"This wasn't moonshine that someone was brewing in their
basement, eyeballing the measurements," Koh notes. "This wine's
recipe was strictly followed in each and every jar."
Important guests drank this wine, notes Yasur-Landau.
"The wine cellar was located near a hall where banquets took
place, a place where the Kabri elite and possibly foreign guests consumed goat
meat and wine," he says.
At the end of the season, the team discovered two doors leading
out of the wine cellar -- one to the south, and one to the west. Both probably
lead to additional storage rooms. They'll have to wait until 2015 to find out
for sure.
Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Copenhagen.
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