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  • €8.00 - €48.00

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Denomination of origin

Abruzzo

History and Tradition This area of Italy was already inhabited in pre-Roman times by the pre-Indo-European culture of the Piceni and subsequently by various Italic tribes. Known in ancient times as Samnium, the name was changed in the Middle Ages to Aprutium. In the 12th century the emperor Frederick the 1st named the region Listitieratu Aprutii and made it part of the Kingdom of Southern Italy, a political entity that despite many difficulties, maintained its own identity until 1860. L’Aquila, the current regional capital, was probably founded in 1254 to sustain an anti-imperial uprising in the western part of the region. The Kingdom of Southern Italy passed from Spain to Austria and, in 1735, became the property of the French Bourbons. When Napoleon assumed power, his brother-in-law Joachim Murat became the king of Southern Italy. The poet Gabriele Rossetti from Vasto was appointed Secretary of Public Education in the administration of the kingdom. Rossetti later lived in exile in London, where his son, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, became a well-known painter and was one of the founders of the pre-Raphaelite movement. The Kingdom of Southern Italy came to an end in 1860 following Garibaldi's victorious campaign that united modern Italy. Abruzzo was then joined with Molise into a single region known as Abruzzi e Molise. The status was changed in 1963 when the joining was reversed and today’s Abruzzo was born while Molise became a separate region. The United Italian government continued and expanded civil works started by the Bourbons, such as draining the Lake Fucino creating 140 square kilometers of excellent agricultural land. In addition, new railways and highways were built, and in 1923 the national Park of Abruzzi was established protecting an area of 400 square kilometers as a local habitat sanctuary. During the 1970's and 1980's the Adriatic coast saw the birth of a new industry-based economy which, along with tourism, provided a much needed stable economy for the local population. The Wines Abruzzo produces just one DOCG and three DOC wines that, though they carry brand names, used to be little known abroad and misjudged as cheap, generic, supermarket varieties. This is changing though, as of much of southern Italy the region is undergoing a gradual transition from bulk-wine production to bottled, boutique wines. In other words, a transition from a strictly industrial wine culture to one in which a limited and cared-for production that can bring commercial success and prosperity to the local residents. Though the situation is changing, there still a tendency by wine critics, including Italian ones, to look down on the wines produced in the mezzogiorno, or southern Italy. What is missing in this blanket evaluation of Abruzzo wines, is the fact that many better-regarded French and northern Italian wines contain in various measures wine from this region, since much of it’s production is still shipped north for blending purposes. The four DOC produced in Abruzzo are the Contro Guerra, Trebbiano d'Abruzzo, Montepulciano d'Abruzzo and Montepulciano d'Abruzzo Colline Teramane. The last two should not be confused with the Tuscan Vino Nobile di Montepulciano. While the Tuscan one takes its name from the town where it’s made in the province of Siena, the Abruzzo wine is made with a grape named Montepulciano.

Abruzzo

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€8.90

Montepulciano d'Abruzzo DOC

DIRECTLY TO YOUR HOME!

The first line created by Gianni Masciarelli has become over the years a landmark for the company and its customers, in addition to being the most consistent and known, in Italy and abroad. Its wines are today “a classic”, which can reflect the genuine taste of tradition and the quality of Abruzzo native vines.....

€13.00

Montepulciano d'Abruzzo DOC

DIRECTLY TO YOUR HOME!

t was the first wine produced at our estate. An elegant and personal interpretation of the Montepulciano in our territory, it is obtained from repeated harvests in the same plots of the whole Loreto Aprutino vineyard, followed by a further selection on the sorting table. ...