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Topography |
samosin / Topography / Samian muscat | ||
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In graves of the era of the Pharaoh’s during the 6th millennium bc. sperms and leaves of vines were found. In the Old Testament it is mentioned that Noah got drunk reaching a pathetic situation after drinking wine made from a vineyard that he himself had planted right after the cataclysm. In the Old Testament the famous vineyards of Canaan are also mentioned. According to Greek mythology vine has been brought from Asia by Dionysus (also called Bacchus) and his son Inopionas and they taught the Greeks how to grow vines and make wine. Therefore Dionysus was worshiped as the god of wine all over Greece. According to many phytogeographers, motherland of the vine should be the area surrounding the Mt Caucasus and the area of Pontus that is South of the Caspian sea. From Asia it was imported to Europe during the prehistoric times. There are others however that propose that vine is an indigenous plant in Europe and that it was in existence even from the Pleistocene era.
The
cultivation of wine, from the ancient years and it’s great geographic
span resulted to the creation of many varieties. They are difficult to
distinguish since the same variety may have different variations from
place to place since many of it’s characters are interdepended to the
climate of each location.
Tyrant
Polycrates in order to reform agriculture and industry in parallel has
brought to Samos improved races of sheep from Melitos, goats from Skyros
and pigs from Sicily with obvious purpose to exploit the soil of the
olive groves, the bush land, the wild chestnuts and acorns that were
plenty in Samos ever until the end of the 19th century. With the wool
they would supply the industry of their time producing textiles. As
they used to say these wool textiles "were softer than sleep itself, worthy of gods to
lay on them". So the Samians of that era seem not to be very interested
in growing vines that were plenty in the near by islands and exploited
their land in different ways possibly thus more productively. However there
should have been some wine production since Aethlios praises
Samian wine and Isichios mentions “Samian vine” as well. The first one ever to mention Samian wine (apart for ancient times) is a monk named Theodorus (1143-1180), who in a poem against abbots writes “they drink sweet wine from Crete and from Samos” but does not mention if the wine was from Muscat vines, since sweet wine can be made from other vine varieties as well. Samian Muscat wine is mentioned for the first time by Cesario Daponte (1714-1784) in a religious poem and goes: “wine from Scopelos, comandaria from Cyprus, Muscat from Samos, Rosolio from Corfu,, excellent things”
Cesario
Daponte was a scholarch from Scopelos and has visited Samos in 1754.
As
mentioned by a variety of writers, the variety Samos Muscat is
originated from Asia Minor and is the result of a mutation. It has been
brought to Samos in the end of the 16th century, where due to climate
has developed in full its characteristics. It’s the same variety as
Muscat de Frontignan that is cultivated in meridian France and it is
beyond doubt that the French when Phyloxera has stroke their vineyards, took
transplants from Samos and planted them in France creating in this way
this variety (Muscat de Frontignan).
Samian wine began to be widely known in the rest of Europe and from there to the world when phylloxera destroyed many European vineyards.
Mainly the French and
Italians in order to secure wine and other vine products (like raisins)
turned to the eastern parts of Europe that were not affected, one of these parts
was Samos.
The great demand for these products brought a significant price increase and for that reason Samos was very soon a huge vineyard. Even the most rough terrain was leveled and planted with vines. The plottage was 4.7000.000 sq. meters at that time, as sources of the time mention. That is when French enologists came and brought the most modern equipment, they established wineries and produced sweet wines by grapes that they bought from the winegrowers. The wine was then shipped to France and they are the first ones to practice the method of stopping the fermentation of must by adding alcohol and these wines are the so called even today “stopped wines” (or mistelia). The same method is followed even today by the “Union of Vinicultural Cooperatives of Samos” to produce some types of wine.
When
the phylloxera-destroyed the vineyards of Europe they were re-planted with
American vines that soon began to produce. The demand for wine and
raisins began to drop, the prices fell dramatically and the production
remained unsold. That’s when in Greece (Samos back then was a Hegemony)
the so-called Raisin Problem was created and for many years it used to
dominate the politic life of the country. In Samos this problem was not
created at all since the Samian vineyards were already destroyed to a
large extend by phylloxera in 1892.
Simultaneously, in order to provide the farmers with some income until the vines had grown enough to provide grapes, the cultivation of tobacco was also imported to Samos. Tobacco because of the quality of the production and since it could also put in use the (common in these days) child labor soon became the main cultivation for many villages and occupied great plottage. In that way, after the phylloxera epidemic had passed, Samos had far less vineyards than a few years ago. The vineyards were restricted to the central and north part of the island mainly, that are even today characterized as “Muscat zone” while in the south part olive trees and tobacco were the dominant cultivations. As far variety is concerned, Muscat was the dominant one. The poverty wave that stroke the island with the phylloxera epidemic was a great one and as it happens in similar cases led to a big immigration wave, mainly among the younger people. Data from that era indicate that until 1910 3083 people immigrated mostly to the United States and 813 young women to become maids or nannies to rich Greek families in Egypt (back then there was a flourishing Greek community) when the total population of Samos, according to the 1902 census was 53051 people, out of which 27061 male and 25990 female.
In
due time the economy of the island become to improve, tobacco became
With
the voting by the parliament of a law regarding cooperatism on
25.02.1934 the process of establishment of the “Union of Vinicultural
Cooperatives of Samos” begun. Based on article 1 of the above mentioned
law
Today
“Union of Vinicultural Cooperatives of Samos” is comprised by 25
cooperatives with 4000 members/producers and an annual production of
9000 tons of Muscat grapes. It has two fully equipped wineries and
permanently employs 130
Winegrowers
are enjoying good prices for their product, probably the highest in
Greece, for example for 1998 harvest the price was 15 grd net per grade
for common grapes. With 14 grades as medium, this price corresponds
to 210 grd (0,62 Euro) per kilo of grapes. This price can be up to 70%
higher for grapes with higher grades or if they fulfill certain
specifications.
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