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Home Archaeology

Real vintage: Ancient complex produced 2 million liters of wine a year

While there is no way of gauging the flavor of the ancient "Gaza wines," contemporary texts describe them as "agreeable to the taste," says archaeologist Jon Seligman.

by  Reuters and ILH Staff
Published on  10-12-2021 12:40
Last modified: 10-12-2021 12:53
Real vintage: Ancient complex produced 2 million liters of wine a yearP/Tsafrir Abayov

Avshalom Davidesko from the Israel's Antiquities Authority examines a jar in a massive ancient winemaking complex dating back some 1,500 years in Yavne, Oct. 11, 2021 | Photo: P/Tsafrir Abayov

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A 1,500-year-old wine factory the size of a modern-day football field has been unearthed in Israel, showing how vintners met demand for high quality white wine popular throughout the ancient world.

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Excavated in Yavne, some 30 km (18 miles) south of Tel Aviv, the cluster of five winepresses was once able to produce about 2 million liters (530,000 gallons) a year, the Israel Antiquities Authority said.

Video: Reuters

The stone structures were so well preserved that it is still easy to visualize the winemaking process – from the platform where piles of grapes split open under their own weight, releasing "free-run" juice for the choicest wines, to the grape-stomping floor and collection basins.

An aerial picture taken by a drone shows a massive ancient winemaking complex dating back some 1,500 years AP/Tsafrir Abayov

Dozens of wine jugs, tall and thin, which were made in large kilns on site and able to hold up to 25 liters (6.6 gallons), were also found.

The dig team said these were known as "Gaza jars" after the nearby port from which they were shipped abroad. Such jars have been found across Europe, evidence that the wine was in high demand.

Wine was a common beverage in ancient times, served to children as well as adults, said Jon Seligman, one of the excavation directors. It was often used as a substitute for water, which was not always safe to drink, or as an additive to improve its taste and nutritional value.

"Having five huge winepresses right next to each other shows that there is industrial design over here," Seligman said, describing the complex, which authorities plan to open to the public. "The apex of the wine production which was associated with the Gazan wines."

And did the final product taste like wines of today?

It's impossible to know, Seligman said, while noting that ancient texts have described the beverage as a light white wine that was "agreeable to the taste."

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Tags: archaeologybiblical archaeologywinewinemakingYavne

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