LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS |
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xi | |
PREFACE |
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xv | |
1. Stone Age Wine |
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1 | (15) |
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3 | (4) |
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Man Meets Grape: The Paleolithic Hypothesis |
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7 | (4) |
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Whence the Domesticated Eurasian Grapevine? |
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11 | (3) |
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When and Where Was Wine First Made? |
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14 | (2) |
2. The Noah Hypothesis |
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16 | (24) |
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16 | (3) |
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Transcaucasia: The Homeland of Viniculture? |
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19 | (2) |
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Exploring Georgia and Armenia |
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21 | (4) |
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25 | (4) |
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Casting a Wider Net in Anatolia |
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29 | (1) |
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The Indo-European Homeland |
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30 | (5) |
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35 | (2) |
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37 | (3) |
3. The Archaeological and Chemical Hunt for the Earliest Wine |
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40 | (24) |
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40 | (8) |
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Molecular Archaeology Comes of Age |
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48 | (3) |
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Identifying the Godin Tepe Jar Residues by Infrared Spectrometry |
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51 | (3) |
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54 | (1) |
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From Grape Juice to Wine to Vinegar |
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55 | (3) |
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Winemaking at the Dawn of Civilization |
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58 | (2) |
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60 | (1) |
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A Symposium in the True Sense of the Word |
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61 | (3) |
4. Neolithic Wine! |
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64 | (21) |
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65 | (3) |
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Liquid Chromatography: Another Tool of Molecular Archaeology |
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68 | (2) |
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Ancient Retsina: A Beverage and a Medicine |
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70 | (2) |
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72 | (2) |
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Wild or Domesticated Grapes? |
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74 | (1) |
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More Neolithic Wine Jars from Transcaucasia |
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74 | (4) |
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Creating a Ferment in Neolithic Turkey: A Hypothesis to Be Tested |
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78 | (7) |
5. Wine of the Earliest Pharaohs |
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85 | (22) |
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A Royal Industry Par Excellence |
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85 | (6) |
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An Amazing Discovery from a Dynasty O Royal Tomb |
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91 | (12) |
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Ancient Yeast DNA Discovered |
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103 | (4) |
6. Wine of Egypt's Golden Age |
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107 | (41) |
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The Hyksos: A Continuing Taste for Levantine Wines |
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107 | (13) |
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Festival Wine at the Height of the New Kingdom |
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120 | (14) |
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Wine as the Ultimate Religious Expression |
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134 | (3) |
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Wines of the Heretic King, Akhenaten, and of Tutankhamun |
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137 | (4) |
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The Vineyard of Egypt under the Ramessides |
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141 | (7) |
7. Wine of the World's First Cities |
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148 | (19) |
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A Beer-Drinking Culture Only? |
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149 | (9) |
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Banqueting the Mesopotamian Way |
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158 | (2) |
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Wine, Too, Was Drunk in the Lowland Cities |
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160 | (4) |
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Transplanting the Grapevine to Shiraz |
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164 | (3) |
8. Wine and the Great Empires of the Ancient Near East |
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167 | (43) |
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Wine Down the Tigris and Euphrates |
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168 | (6) |
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Wines of Anatolia and the Lost Hittite Empire |
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174 | (14) |
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Assyrian Expansionism: Cupbearers, Cauldrons, and Drinking Horns |
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188 | (13) |
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The Fine Wines of Aram and Phoenicia |
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201 | (5) |
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Eastward to Persia and China |
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206 | (4) |
9. The Holy Land's Bounty |
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210 | (29) |
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Winepresses in the Hills, and Towers and Vineyards in the Wadi Floors |
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212 | (5) |
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The Success of the Experiment |
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217 | (3) |
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Serving the Needs of a Cosmopolitan Society |
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220 | (5) |
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Wine for the Kings and the Masses |
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225 | (8) |
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Dark Reds and Powerful Browns |
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233 | (3) |
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Wine: A Heritage of the Judeo-Christian Tradition |
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236 | (3) |
10. Lands of Dionysos: Greece and Western Anatolia |
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239 | (40) |
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240 | (7) |
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A Minoan Connection? The Earliest Greek Retsina |
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247 | (12) |
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259 | (3) |
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"Greek Grog" : A Revolution in Beverage Making |
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262 | (6) |
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Wine and "Greek Grog" during the Heroic Age |
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268 | (11) |
11. A Beverage for King Midas and at the Limits of the Civilized World |
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279 | (20) |
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King Midas and "Phrygian Grog" |
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279 | (14) |
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Re-creating an Ancient Anatolian Beverage and Feast |
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293 | (3) |
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To the Hyperborean Regions of the North: "European Grog" |
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296 | (3) |
12. Molecular Archaeology, Wine, and a View to the Future |
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299 | (18) |
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299 | (3) |
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302 | (3) |
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Why Alcohol and Why Wine? |
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305 | (2) |
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The Lowly Yeast to the Forefront |
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307 | (1) |
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308 | (4) |
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Wine, the Perfect Metaphor |
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312 | (5) |
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY |
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317 | (12) |
ILLUSTRATION CREDITS AND OBJECT DIMENSIONS |
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329 | (6) |
INDEX |
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335 | |