THE HISTORY OF VALPOLICELLA |
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In Valpolicella the bond between grapevines and territory has ancient origins. The most ancient proof of the cultivation of grapevines dates back to the fifth century BC for the discovery, in the pre-Roman village of Archi di Castelrotto, of numerous wine grape seeds. According to historians the name “Valpolicella” comes from the Latin “Vallis-polis-cellae” which means “Valley of the many cellars". The name of Vitis raetica derives from the toponym Raetia, a region that from the Danube stretched, in Roman times, to the canton of Graubunden (in Switzerland) and included Tyrol and Lombardy up to Verona. There are numerous authors that mention the grapes and wine of these vineyards:Around the middle of the second century B.C. Canton praised the retica grape while Suetonius, speaking of the private life of the emperor, said that that he particularly enjoyed “retico wine” . Martial who saved it, perhaps for ageing, in an amphora, reported the origins of the lands of ductus Catullo and therefore from Verona.
The most beautiful praise for the Veronese wine is that written by Cassidoro (490-593 AD), magister officiorum under Theodoric, king of the Visigoths, who in a letter describes a wine made with a special drying technique, then called Acinatico, a name deriving from grape (Acinaticum, cui nomen ex acino est, …), produced in the territory called Valipolicella.
“.. red like purple or white like fragrant lilies, stately and thick…. Pure wine of the royal colour and special tastes, as if the purple is coloured by the wine itself or that it's clear spirit is wrung out by the purple... the sweetness of it is felt with incredible suave, it affirms the density for I do not know what backbone, and swells when touched in a manner that one would say it is a meaty liquid, or a drink to eat from…”
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Any doubts that that this is a close relative of the actual Recioto vanishes when, again from the same Latin prose of Cassidoro, we also learn the production methods of this straw wine: