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‘Surprising’ discovery in world’s oldest wine reveals ancient Roman ritual

Glass urn containing wine was found in a tomb in Spain five years ago

Vishwam Sankaran
Sunday 29 September 2024 08:31 EDT
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Related: Iconic Rome by Drone

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The world’s oldest wine, discovered recently in a Roman tomb in Spain, has been found to contain a man’s cremated bones, shedding light on first-century funerary rituals in the region.

Archaeologists announced the discovery earlier this year of a strange liquid inside a 2,000-year-old glass urn of Andalusian origin which turned out to be the oldest wine ever found.

The urn had been discovered in 2019 in a Roman tomb in Carmona.

Now, researchers have found that a man’s cremated bones were immersed in the liquid in the first century AD.

The liquid, described in the Journal of Archaeological Science, predates the bottle of Speyer wine found in 1867 and dated to the fourth century AD.

The wine in the glass urn
The wine in the glass urn (Juan Manuel Román)

“At first we were very surprised that liquid was preserved in one of the funerary urns,” Carmona’s municipal archaeologist Juan Manuel Román said.

To confirm that the liquid was indeed wine, scientists ran a series of chemical analyses to assess its pH, organic matter and salt content.

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They then compared the chemicals detected in it to present-day Montilla-Moriles, Jerez and Sanlúcar wines.

The key to determining that the liquid was indeed wine was the discovery of chemicals called polyphenols, which are present in all wines.

Scientists found seven specific polyphenol compounds that are also present in wines from Montilla-Moriles, Jerez and Sanlúcar.

But determining the origin of the ancient wine has been a challenge since there are no samples from the period to compare the liquid to.

The urn and the lead case it was encased it
The urn and the lead case it was encased it (Juan Manuel Román et al)

The presence of cremated bones, meanwhile, sheds more light on funerary rituals prevalent in the Spanish region in the Roman era.

The skeletal remains were immersed in the wine along with a gold ring. That the remains belonged to a man was “no coincidence”, archaeologists said.

They explained that women were prohibited in ancient Rome from drinking wine, which was considered “a man’s drink”. The urn’s ash content reflected the Roman society’s gender divisions in funerary rituals.

Another urn found in the tomb contained a woman’s remains but not a drop of wine. Instead, it contained three amber jewels, a bottle of perfume, with a patchouli scent, and the remains of silk fabrics.

The wine, perfume, rings, and other elements were placed in the tomb as a funerary custom stemming from the belief that they would be needed by the deceased in their voyage to the afterlife, researchers said.

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