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Big bottles: What are their names?
Wine may go back many millennia to Bronze Age
times, but the wine bottle as we know it today is only about three
centuries old. It was only the development of the cork-stoppered,
cylindrical glass bottle - which could be stacked on its side, keeping
the cork airtight and wet - that permitted the development of ageworthy
wines that improve with cellaring.
The "fifth" bottle, originally one-fifth of a gallon, now rounded off
metrically to 750 ml., was said to be a suitable ration for one man with
dinner, back in the days when men were men (and most wine was quite low
in alcoholic strength). One theory holds that this size bottle was
actually the largest that early glass-blowers could produce with one
full breath.
But even in those early days, for very special occasions, wineries
would put up their product in impressive, oversize bottles. For reasons
lost to history, most of these bottles were given the names of Biblical
figures like the evil king Nebuchadnezzar and the long-lived Methuselah.
The naming conventions varied somewhat among wine regions, with the
two standards being Champagne and Bordeaux in France. In case you run
into a big bottle, here's a quick field guide to the larger sizes:
CHAMPAGNE
Magnum: 1.5 liters (two bottles)
Jeroboam: 3 liters (four bottles)
Rehoboam: 4.5 liters (six bottles)
Methuselah: 6 liters (eight bottles)
Salmanazar: 9 liters (12 bottles)
Balthazar: 12 liters (16 bottles)
Nebuchadnezzar: 15 liters (20 bottles)
Even larger sizes are occasionally seen, although they are very rare:
Solomon: 20 liters (28 bottles)
Primat: 27 liters (36 bottles)
BORDEAUX
Magnum: 1.5 liters (two bottles)
Marie-Jeanne: 2.25 liters (three bottles)
Double Magnum: 3 liters (four bottles)
Jeroboam: 4.5 liters (six bottles) *
Impèriale: 6 liters (eight bottles)
* Because of recent U.S. regulations limiting
larger bottles to even liter sizes, some modern red-wine "Jeroboams" are
now 5 liters rather than the traditional 4.5.
Jeroboam (Founder and first king of Israel, 931-910 BC)
Rehoboam, son of Solomon (King of Judah, 922-908 BC)
Methuselah (Biblical patriarch who lived to the age of 969)
Salmanazar (King of Assyria, 859-824 BC)
Balthazar (Regent of Babylon, son of Nabonide, 539BC)
Nebuchadnezzar (King of Babylon, 605-562 BC)
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30
31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55
56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63,64,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81
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