Friday Quiz - the answers
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Friday Quiz - the answers
Friday Quiz Time,
Wine used to be transported around the place in clay containers (amphoras). At some stage this was changed to use barrels instead.
When did this happen, and who was responsible?
Wine used to be transported around the place in clay containers (amphoras). At some stage this was changed to use barrels instead.
When did this happen, and who was responsible?
Last edited by Quizmasters Apprentice on Fri Oct 31, 2003 1:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Nope, not the Celts. My research is that they were too busy drinking it and had none to transport
Last edited by Quizmasters Apprentice on Fri Oct 31, 2003 12:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Anthony, no, not Florentine and again, not the Celts.
Popov, read the question again, it isn't 'who developed the barrel' it is when did the shipping of wine change from amphoras to barrels, and who did it.
In a corollary, wine barrels where overwhelmingly used to transport wine until the 20th century, until glass bottles began to be used widely, even though glass bottles had been around for a while before then.
Popov, read the question again, it isn't 'who developed the barrel' it is when did the shipping of wine change from amphoras to barrels, and who did it.
In a corollary, wine barrels where overwhelmingly used to transport wine until the 20th century, until glass bottles began to be used widely, even though glass bottles had been around for a while before then.
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- Posts: 112
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- Posts: 112
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You did mean the first century AD don't you?
In which case, correct.
The source is "A Short History of Wine" by Rod Phillips.
To quote, which starts part way through a paragraph of the Romans in Britain.
In which case, correct.
The source is "A Short History of Wine" by Rod Phillips.
To quote, which starts part way through a paragraph of the Romans in Britain.
The Romans pushed viticulture as far as Britain, where the climatic conditions were far from ideal for growing wine grapes. There appears to have been a vigorous but short-lived English wine industry thaht include the manufacture of amphoras.
The growth of these provincial wine did nothing to help the trade in Italian wine which went into decline from the first century AD.
At this time there was a shift in technology as amphoras ... were replaced by other containers. Roman exporters began to ship wine in wooden barrels... Quite why amphoras were abandoned is not clear, but one result is that evidence of the wine trade is much more difficult to find. Amphoras survive thousands of years of burial underground or at seas, but wooden barrels rot at disintegrate without trace.
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