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Italian Wine through the Ages
Italy’s modern prodigiousness with wine scarcely
begins to tell the story of its people’s perennial links to the
vine. The nature of the place—the influence of Mediterranean sunshine
and mountain air currents on the hillsides of the elongated peninsula
and islands—favors what seems to be an almost spontaneous culture
of wine.
The heritage dates back some 4,000 years to when prehistoric peoples
pressed wild grapes into juice that, as if by magic, fermented into
wine. The ancient Greeks, expanding into Italy’s southern reaches,
dubbed the colonies Oenotria, the land of wine.
Etruscans were subtle and serene practitioners of the art of winemaking
in the hills of central Italy, as attested by the art and artifacts
left in their spacious tombs. The ancient Liguri produced and traded
wine in northwestern Italy and southeastern France.
The Romans propagated the cult of Bacchus to all corners of the empire,
developing a flourishing trade in wine throughout Mediterranean lands
and beyond. So sophisticated was their knowledge of viticulture and
enology that their techniques were not equaled again until the 17th
or 18th centuries when Italians and other Europeans began to regard
the making of wine as science rather than mystique.
Winemaking in Italy advanced rapidly through the 19th century, as methods
of vinification and aging were improved and the use of corks to seal
reinforced bottles and flasks permitted orderly shipping of wine worldwide.
Such names as Chianti, Barolo and Marsala became known in Europe and
beyond.
A century ago, several Italian wines were recognized as among the finest
of their type: mainly Piedmontese and Tuscan reds from the Nebbiolo
and Sangiovese varieties, but also white wines, still and sparkling,
dry or sweet, merited international respect. Growers had complemented
their local varieties with foreign vines, such as Cabernet, Merlot and
the Pinots. There was evidence, then as now, that Italy’s multifarious
climates and terrains favored vines of many different types and styles,
and consumers elsewhere in Europe and in North America had come to appreciate
these new examples of class.
Then came phylloxera and other scourges to devastate Europe’s
vineyards around the turn of the century. Italian growers, who had been
working with thousands of local varieties, were forced to reduce the
numbers. Many opted for newly developed, more productive clones of both
native and foreign vines. Taking advantage of the long, sunny growing
season, they forced yields upward, reasoning that there was usually
more profit to be made from quantity than quality.
Through the hard times of wars and depression, Italy became one of the
world’s leading purveyors of low cost wine, often sold in containers
of outlandish shapes and sizes. Though such practices were profitable
for some, they did little for the image of Italian wine abroad.
For decades responsible producers had been trying to tighten regulations
and put the emphasis on premium quality. But it was not until the denominazione
d’origine laws were passed in the 1960s that a new climate of
dignity and trust created the base for what came to be known as the
modern renaissance of Italian wine.
Since Vernaccia di San Gimignano became the first DOC in 1966, the list
has grown to include more than 300 zones delimited geographically, within
which a multitude of wines are controlled for authenticity (see details
under Wine Laws & Labels.) DOC/DOCG wines
represent less than 20 percent of the total. Beyond them come a growing
number of wines that qualify under the recently introduced category of
indicazione geografica tipica (IGT). The "typical" category
applies to wines that range from locally admired to internationally acclaimed.
Despite the reduction through this century, Italy still has more types
of vines planted than any other country, including natives and a virtually
complete range of the so-called international varieties. The number
of officially approved Vitis vinifera varieties runs well into the hundreds,
and there are even a few non-vinifera vines and hybrids used here and
there by the nation's countless do-it-yourself winemakers.
This heritage of vines permits Italy to produce a greater range of distinctive
wines than any other nation. Though Italy is most noted for its noble
reds for aging, trends also favor more immediate types of rosso, including
the vini novelli to be drunk within months of the harvest. Italy is
also a major producer of white wines, ranging in style from light and
fruity to oak-matured versions of impressive substance and depth. Some
regions are noted for bubbly wines, whether the lightly fizzy frizzante
or the fully sparkling spumante made by either the sealed tank charmat
or bottle-fermented classico or tradizionale method.
This wealth of wines may seem overwhelming. Consumers outside Italy
are sometimes bewildered by the assortment of names of places, grape
varieties, proprietors and types and in exasperation turn to more comprehensible
sources for wine.
This booklet is designed to provide readers with clear and concise information
that should allay some of the confusion. But it cannot offer a shortcut
to the mastery of Italian wines. That can come only through experience,
as wine drinkers overcome taste prejudices and the fear of the unknown
to appreciate why Italian winemakers are proud to be different in an
age of uniformity.
Without staking claims to supremacy, it seems fair to submit that numerous
Italian wines stand with the international elite. But what is perhaps
most encouraging is that Italy’s premium production continues
to expand and improve. Italians have become increasingly committed to
meeting the growing demand for wines of quality and character at every
level of price.

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