
Ancient Wine
by McGovern, Patrick E.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations | p. xi |
Foreword | p. xv |
Preface | p. xix |
Stone Age Wine | p. 1 |
Sifting Fact from Legend | p. 3 |
Man Meets Grape: The Paleolithic Hypothesis | p. 7 |
Whence the Domesticated Eurasian Grapevine? | p. 11 |
When and Where Was Wine First Made? | p. 14 |
The Noah Hypothesis | p. 16 |
Genetics and Gilgamesh | p. 16 |
Transcaucasia: The Homeland of Viniculture? | p. 19 |
Exploring Georgia and Armenia | p. 21 |
Ancient DNA | p. 25 |
Casting a Wider Net in Anatolia | p. 29 |
The Indo-European Homeland | p. 30 |
"Noah's Flood" | p. 35 |
Farther Afield | p. 37 |
The Archaeological and Chemical Hunt for the Earliest Wine | p. 40 |
Godin Tepe | p. 40 |
Molecular Archaeology Comes of Age | p. 48 |
Identifying the Godin Tepe Jar Residues by Infrared Spectrometry | p. 51 |
Archaeological Inference | p. 54 |
From Grape Juice to Wine to Vinegar | p. 55 |
Winemaking at the Dawn of Civilization | p. 58 |
The First Wine Rack? | p. 60 |
A Symposium in the True Sense of the Word | p. 61 |
Neolithic Wine! | p. 64 |
A Momentous Innovation | p. 65 |
Liquid Chromatography: Another Tool of Molecular Archaeology | p. 68 |
Ancient Retsina: A Beverage and a Medicine | p. 70 |
A Media Barrage | p. 72 |
Wild or Domesticated Grapes? | p. 74 |
More Neolithic Wine Jars from Transcaucasia | p. 74 |
Creating a Ferment in Neolithic Turkey: A Hypothesis to Be Tested | p. 78 |
Wine of the Earliest Pharaohs | p. 85 |
A Royal Industry Par Excellence | p. 85 |
An Amazing Discovery from a Dynasty 0 Royal Tomb | p. 91 |
Ancient Yeast DNA Discovered | p. 103 |
Wine of Egypt's Golden Age | p. 107 |
The Hyksos: A Continuing Taste for Levantine Wines | p. 107 |
Festival Wine at the Height of the New Kingdom | p. 120 |
Wine as the Ultimate Religious Expression | p. 134 |
Wines of the Heretic King, Akhenaten, and of Tutankhamun | p. 137 |
The Vineyard of Egypt under the Ramessides | p. 141 |
Wine of the World's First Cities | p. 148 |
A Beer-Drinking Culture Only? | p. 149 |
Banqueting the Mesopotamian Way | p. 158 |
Wine, Too, Was Drunk in the Lowland Cities | p. 160 |
Transplanting the Grapevine to Shiraz | p. 164 |
Wine and the Great Empires of the Ancient Near East | p. 167 |
Wine Down the Tigris and Euphrates | p. 168 |
Wines of Anatolia and the Lost Hittite Empire | p. 174 |
Assyrian Expansionism: Cupbearers, Cauldrons, and Drinking Horns | p. 188 |
The Fine Wines of Aram and Phoenicia | p. 201 |
Eastward to Persia and China | p. 206 |
The Holy Land's Bounty | p. 210 |
Winepresses in the Hills, and Towers and Vineyards in the Wadi Floors | p. 212 |
The Success of the Experiment | p. 217 |
Serving the Needs of a Cosmopolitan Society | p. 220 |
Wine for the Kings and the Masses | p. 225 |
Dark Reds and Powerful Browns | p. 233 |
Wine: A Heritage of the Judeo-Christian Tradition | p. 236 |
Lands of Dionysos: Greece and Western Anatolia | p. 239 |
Drinking the God | p. 240 |
A Minoan Connection? The Earliest Greek Retsina | p. 247 |
Wine Mellowed with Oak | p. 259 |
"Greek Grog": A Revolution in Beverage Making | p. 262 |
Wine and "Greek Grog" during the Heroic Age | p. 268 |
A Beverage for King Midas and at the Limits of the Civilized World | p. 279 |
King Midas and "Phrygian Grog" | p. 279 |
Re-creating an Ancient Anatolian Beverage and Feast | p. 293 |
To the Hyperborean Regions of the North: "European Grog" | p. 296 |
Molecular Archaeology, Wine, and a View to the Future | p. 299 |
Where It All Began | p. 299 |
Consumed by Wine | p. 302 |
Why Alcohol and Why Wine? | p. 305 |
The Lowly Yeast to the Forefront | p. 307 |
Mixing Things Up | p. 308 |
Wine, the Perfect Metaphor | p. 312 |
Selected Bibliography | p. 317 |
Illustration Credits and Object Dimensions | p. 329 |
Index | p. 335 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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