Skip to Main Content

12GEO - The Study of Wine: Home

This guide contains resources related to the study of the production, market globalisation and technological advances within the wine industry.

Grapes. [Image]. In Encyclopædia Britannica. . 

Search our Databases

Useful Sites

Useful Resources

Referencing

Search our Library

Watch

The History of Winemaking

Vitis vinifera was being cultivated in the Middle East by 4000 BCE and probably earlier. Egyptian records dating from 2500 BCE refer to the use of grapes for wine making, and numerous biblical references to wine indicate the early origin and significance of the industry in the Middle East. The Greeks carried on an active wine trade and planted grapes in their colonies from the Black Sea to Spain. The Romans carried grape growing into the valleys of the Rhine and Moselle (which became the great wine regions of Germany and Alsace), the Danube (of Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Hungary, and Austria), and the Rhône, Saône, Garonne, Loire, and Marne (which define the great French regions of Rhône, Burgundy, Bordeaux, Loire, and Champagne, respectively). The role of wine in the Christian mass helped maintain the industry after the fall of the Roman Empire, and monastic orders preserved and developed many of the highly regarded wine-producing areas in Europe.

Following the voyages of Columbus, grape culture and wine making were transported from the Old World to the New. Spanish missionaries took viticulture to Chile and Argentina in the mid-16th century and to Baja California in the 18th. With the flood of European immigration in the 19th and early 20th centuries, modern industries based on imported V. vinifera grapes were developed. The prime wine-growing regions of South America were established in the foothills of the Andes Mountains. In California the centre of viticulture shifted from the southern missions to the Central Valley and the northern counties of Sonoma, Napa, and Mendocino.

British settlers planted European vines in Australia and New Zealandin the early 19th century, and Dutch settlers took grapes from the Rhine region to South Africa as early as 1654.

The introduction of the eastern American root louse, phylloxera, seriously threatened wine industries around the world between 1870 and 1900, destroying vineyards almost everywhere that V. viniferawas planted but especially in Europe and parts of Australia and California. To combat this parasite, V. vinifera scions (detached shoots including buds) were grafted to species native to the eastern United States, which proved almost completely resistant to phylloxera. After the vineyards recovered, European governments protected the reputations of the great regions by enacting laws that allotted regional names and quality rankings only to those wines produced in specific regions under strictly regulated procedures. Today, newer wine-producing countries have passed similar regulations.

Wine. (2018). In Encyclopædia Britannica.

The Wine Making Process

1. Harvesting

2. Crushing

3. Juice separation

4. Must treatment

5. Fermentation

6. Postfermentation treatment

7. Malolactic fermentation

8. Clarification

9. Aging and bottling

 

 

Enology: winemaking. [Image]. In Encyclopædia Britannica. 

Technological Advancements

Globalisation

Chateau Chunder

A fun and lively documentary that tells the recent history of the Australian wine industry and reveals how a group of enterprising Australian winemakers took on the world and won, changing the way wine is made and marketed.

Rating: PG     Production Year: 2013     Duration: 56:55