About Cyprus
Wines of Cyprus
With a history of wine making going back to at least 2000 BC, it
is hardly surprising that the Cypriots know more than a thing or
two about viticulture.

In the past, Cyprus' wine was considered to be so delectable that
the Pharoahs of Egypt consumed it, King Solomon praised it in his
poems and its fine quality did not go unnoticed by the ancient Greeks
and Romans. In fact, great wines such as Madeira, Masala and Hungarian
are said to have originated from transplanted Cyprus vines.
Today in Cyprus, grapes still play a major part in agriculture.
With the reliable climate of long, hot summers to ripen the grapes,
it is not surprising that vines thrive. But up until thirty years
ago all the wine was made from just two grapes, Mavro, a black grape
for red wine, and Xynisteri for white wine. Since the 1950's the
government has introduced a range of new grapes to Cyprus and the
customer can now choose between a large range of wines from light
sparkling whites to full bodied red wines.
Experts in oenology monitor the progress of the grapes from the
first pressing up to the ageing of the bottled wines in isothermic
cellars. Many villages now produce and market their own wines, as
do some of the monasteries.
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The most ancient wine of Cyprus is undoubtedly the wine now known
as Commandaria, which, in the distant past, was consumed in great
quantities at the springtime festivals of Aphrodite. Commandaria
derived its name from the Grand, Commandarie a huge estate at Kolossi
belonging to the Knights Hospitallers of the 12th-14th centuries.
Richard the Lionheart enjoyed the wine so much that he called it
'The Wine of Kings and the King of Wines'. Commandaria is a sweet
dessert wine, and is made in a designated region in the foothill
mountain villages of the southern Troodos range. The grapes are
picked late and dried in the sun to enhance their sugar content
and give the wine that nature, almost burnt, flavour. Peculiar to
Cyprus, Commandaria is certaintly worth a taste, but then so are
so many of the Cyprus wines, and at very reasonable prices, so we
suggest you try a range.
Stin iya sou, Health to you or Cheers!
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