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Ancient Egyptians believed in properly equipping a
body for the afterlife, and not just through mummification. A new
study reveals that King Tutankhamun eased his arduous journey with a
stash of red wine.
Spanish scientists have developed the first
technique that can determine the color of wine used in ancient jars.
They analyzed residues from a jar found in the tomb of King Tut and
found that it contained wine made with red grapes.
This is the only extensive chemical analysis that
has been done on a jar from King Tut's tomb, and it is the first time
scientists have provided evidence of the color of wine in an
archaeological sample. The report appears in the March 15 edition of
Analytical Chemistry, a peer-reviewed journal of the American
Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society.
The earliest scientific evidence of grapes is from
60-million-year-old fossil vines, while the first written record of
winemaking comes from a much more recent source, the Bible, which says
Noah planted a vineyard after exiting the ark.
Scientists have detected wine in a jar from as far
back as 5400 B.C., found at the site of Hajji Firuz Tepe in the
northern Zagros Mountains of present-day Iran. But the earliest
knowledge about wine cultivation comes from ancient Egypt, where the
winemaking process was represented on tomb walls dating to 2600 B.C.
"Wine in ancient Egypt was a drink of great
importance, consumed by the upper classes and the kings," says Maria
Rosa Guasch-Jané, a master in Egyptology at the University of
Barcelona in Spain. She and Rosa M. Lamuela-Raventós, Ph.D., a
professor of nutrition and food science, have analyzed samples of
ancient Egyptian jars belonging to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo and
the British Museum in London.
One sample came from the tomb of King Tutankhamun,
discovered in 1922 by Howard Carter in Western Thebes, Egypt. The
inscription on the jar reads: "Year 5. Wine of the
House-of-Tutankhamun Ruler-of-the-Southern-On, l.p.h.[in] the Western
River. By the chief vintner Khaa."
"Wine jars were placed in tombs as funerary meals,"
Guasch-Jané says. "The New Kingdom wine jars were labeled with product,
year, source and even the name of the vine grower, but they did not
mention the color of the wines they contained." Scientists and
oenophiles have long debated the type of grape that ancient Egyptians
used in their wines.
Using a new method for the identification of grape
markers, Lamuela-Raventós and her coworkers determined that the wine
in this jar was made with red grapes.
Tartaric acid, which is rarely found in nature from
sources other than grapes, has been used before as a marker for the
presence of wine in ancient residues, but it offers no information
about the type of grape.
Malvidin-glucoside is the major component that
gives the red color to young red wines, and no other juice used in the
ancient Near East and Mediterranean region contains it. As wine ages,
malvidin reacts with other compounds forming more complex structures.
The researchers directed their efforts toward developing a tool for
breaking down these structures to release syringic acid.
Analysis of ancient samples requires a very
sensitive method to minimize the amount of sample that needs to be
used. To detect syringic acid, the researchers used a technique called
liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry in tandem mode, which is
known for its high speed, sensitivity and selectivity. This method has
never before been used to identify tartaric acid or syringic acid, nor
has it been used on any archaeological sample, according to the
scientists.
Lamuela-Raventós and Guasch-Jané plan to use the
new technique in more extensive studies of wine residues from other
archaeological samples.
The Spanish Wine Culture Foundation and Codorniu
Group provided funding for this research. |