Château Margaux

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The vineyard of Château Margaux stands as the producer of one of the world's greatest and most sought-after red wines. One of only four wines to achieve First Growth status in the oft-cited 1855 Bordeaux Classification, its very expensive vintages command a consistently high premium and are stored and traded over periods of many decades. According to Forbes.com, a bottle of Château Margaux 1787 holds the record as the most expensive bottle of wine ever broken, insured at $225,000.

The château lies in the commune of Margaux in the great wine-producing region of Médoc in the département of Gironde, benefiting from the area's celebrated gravelly terrain on the left bank of the Garonne estuary. It is in the Margaux Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée.

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[edit] History

The estate has been occupied since at least the 12th century, but it was only with the arrival of the Lestonnac family in the 16th century that wine production became of particular importance, and in the 1570s Pierre de Lestonnac cleared many of the grain fields to make way for grapes. By 1700 the estate covered its present area of 265 hectares, and the 78 hectares devoted to vines has remained essentially unchanged since then.

As with most of Médoc's great châteaux, the 18th century saw the wine develop from a pale watery drink that faded within only a few years, to the dark, complex liquid that has been stored in cellars ever since. At Château Margaux this transformation was largely due to a manager named Berlon, who revolutionised techniques of wine-making by introducing novel ideas such as forbidding harvesting in the early morning to avoid dew-covered grapes, and acknowledging for the first time the importance of soil quality.

By the 19th century, the estate's wine was firmly established among the very best in France, with Thomas Jefferson placing it number one in his carefully-studied classification. In 1855 the famous classification ordered by Napoleon III confirmed its status, with Château Margaux the only wine to be awarded 20/20 in blind tastings of Bordeaux's finest wines.

The estate's château itself was completely rebuilt in 1810 when Bertrand Douat, marquis de la Colonilla, commissioned one of Bordeaux' foremost architects, Guy-Louis Combes,[1] to create a building worthy of the wines that were made on the site. The result was Combes' masterpiece, a four-square palace with a columned portico in neo-Palladian style that has been called the "Versailles of the Médoc", familiar from its appearance on the Château Margaux label. It sits in its own park, at the end of a cobbled drive.

In the 1970s, after a series of low-quality vintages, the owners Ferdinand and Pierre Ginestet, owners of the estate since 1950,[2] were forced to sell Château Margaux. The successful buyer was French grocery and finance group Félix Potin, headed by Greek André Mentzelopoulos. Mentzelopoulos transformed the vineyard through well-chosen investment in the wine-making process and by his death in 1980 Château Margaux was back among the region's finest wines. At the beginning of the 1990s, an exchange of shares was negociated with the Agnelly family but the management remained in the hands of Mentzelopoulos' daughter Corinne Mentzelopoulos. In 2003, Corinne Mentzelopoulos bought back the majority stake and became the sole shareholder of Château Margaux.

[edit] Vines

As is predominantly the case in Médoc, the majority of the vines are Cabernet Sauvignon, with its vines covering 75 percent of the vineyards. Next comes Merlot at 20 percent, with Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot making up the rest. Around 30,000 cases are made annually, with production divided between the famous Premier Cru and the additional Pavillon Rouge. A small amount of Sauvignon Blanc is also grown to make the Pavillon Blanc wine.

[edit] Greatest vintages

The finest vintages of Château Margaux are listed below, with particularly strong years given in bold.

1900, 1934, 1945, 1947, 1949, 1953, 1957, 1959, 1961, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2003, 2005 (anticipated)[citation needed]

[edit] Awards

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Guy-Louis Combes (1757-1818) was trained in Paris and spent some student years in Rome before establishing his practice at Bordeaux, where a street commemorates his name.
  2. ^ They had begun buying the terroir in 1934, according to Alexis Lichine (Wines of France 1955, p 29.

[edit] External links

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