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Part m

SECTION III

WINES OF GERMANY

These come chieflj' from two very well known areas

the Rhine and the Moselle.

The cultivation of the vine in these parts spread up the

Valley of the Rhone from Marseilles into the valleys of the

rivers Rhine and Moselle in very early times. Early in the

3rd century A.D. the Roman Emperor of that time ordered

the destruction of the vineyards of these areas, but for

tunately it was the Emperor Probus who ruled from

A.D.276-282 who gave an order for them to be replanted.

Some of the more important vineyards were laid out

in the 12th century. Quite a number of them belonged

to various religious bodies but have since passed into

other hands due in the main to the various wars in which

the German people have been involved throughout the

years.

The name given to the wines of the River Rhine is pro

bably derived from the town of Hochheim, a to^vn on the

River Main, a tributary of the River Rhine. At one time

they were known as"Rhenish"wines.

In these two areas there are protected valleys, the Rhine,

Moselle, Main, Nahe and Saar, in which the cultivation

of the vine is possible, even though they are in such a

northerly position. Even in the sheltered valleys of these

most northerly commercial vineyards, the grapes do not

ripen every year,in some years the musts need the addition

of sugar, and so the resultant wines are not"fine"wines.

In some years the farmers place slates on the ground to

reflect the warmth of the sun to the grapes in order to

ripen them.

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