Grape-pressings from northern Greece: the earliest wine in the Aegean?

S.M. Valamoti, M. Mangafa, Ch. Koukouli-Chrysanthaki, D. Malamidou
2007 Antiquity  
Houses burnt down at the Neolithic site of Dikili Tash in northern Greece preserved the remains of wild grapes and figs. The charred shapes showed that there was a pile of grape pips with skins – clear evidence for the extraction of juice. The authors argue that the juice was probably used to make wine – towards the end of the fifth millennium BC the earliest so far from the Aegean. The occupants of the houses also had two-handled cups, providing another clue to consumption of a special kind.
doi:10.1017/s0003598x00094837 fatcat:sy4g3xzoyfci3mgdx3dvc4ne4m