Pompeii Is Famous for Its Ruins and Bodies, but What About Its Wine?

Pompeii Is Famous for Its Ruins and Bodies, but What About Its Wine?
Vineyards in the ruins of Pompeii, backdropped by Mount Vesuvius. Kaprik/Shutterstock
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Pompeii is famed for plaster-cast bodies, ruins, frescoes, and the rare snapshot it provides of a rather typical ancient Roman city. But less famous is its evidence of viticulture.
Wild grapevines probably existed across peninsular Italy since prehistory, but it is likely the Etruscans and colonizing Greeks promoted wine-making with domesticated grapes as early as 1000 BCE.
Emlyn Dodd
Emlyn Dodd
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