Rheingau (wine region)

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Rheingau is one of 13 designated German wine regions (Weinbaugebiete) producing quality wines (QbA and Prädikatswein). It was named after the traditional region of Rheingau (meaning "Rhine district"), the wine region is situated in the state of Hesse, where it constitutes part of the Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis administrative district. Although, making up only 3 percent of the total German vineyard area, Rheingau has been the source of many historically important innovations in German wine making, and contains many wine producers of international reputation, such as Schloss Johannisberg. Rheingau, with 3,125 hectares (7,720 acres) of vineyards in 2016, also boasts a higher proportion of Riesling (77.7%) than any other German wine-growing region, with Spätburgunder (Pinot noir) making up most of the rest (12.2%), followed by Müller-Thurgau.[1]

Schloss Johannisberg is one of the best known historical important domaines in Germany. It is famous as an early adopter of the Riesling grape varietal, and as the site where the German form of noble rot was discovered by accident.

Geography and terroir

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Erbacher Marcobrunn, surrounded by vineyards.

The geography of the Rheingau is very distinct. Around Wiesbaden, the river Rhine detours from its northward flow west for about 30 km before it flows north again. The greater part of the Rheingau is situated here on the river's right bank, but the region also includes the stretch along Rhine after it turns northward again, around the villages Assmannshausen and Lorch. The vineyards in Hochheim on the Main river are also included, just before it flows into Rhine. The Rheingau spans about 50 km from end to end. North of the Rheingau rises the Taunus mountain range, so most of the Rheingau's vineyards are on south-facing slope between hills and streams, which provides excellent wine-growing conditions in these northerly latitudes.

History

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The Eberbach Abbey was built by the Cistercian monks who founded much of the Rheingau wine industry, and the buildings still house a wine cellar of the Hessian state winery and are used for wine auctions.
 
Old wine cellar at Eberbach Abbey

Since the Verona donation in 983, the Rheingau belonged to the archbishopric of Mainz. Legend has it that Charlemagne let the first vineyards be planted in the region, close to present-day Schloss Johannisberg.[2] However finds like a Roman origin grapevine cutting knife point to even earlier cultivation. Better documented is the early influence of the church on Rheingau winemaking, which was controlled from Eberbach Abbey. Augustinians and Benedictines are known to have inhabited the area of the later abbey from 1116, and in 1135 the Cistercians arrived, sent out from Clairvaux. Legend has it that the Cistercians, which are also credited with having founded the wine industry in Burgundy, brought Pinot noir with them to Rheingau, although the earliest record of the grape variety in Rheingau is from 1470.[3] The slopes down from the Taunus mountains belonging to Eberbach Abbey were planted as vineyards in the 12th century, and early in the 13th century the vineyards had reached their present area. In medieval times, more red than white wine was produced, usually as Gemischter Satz, i.e. the vineyards were planted with mixed varieties which were vinified together.

 
Rheingau Wine Official Classification of 1867

In 2011 it was unveiled, that the Official Wine Classification in the Rheingau has a 150 years history. The classification was the basis for taxation of wineries after the annexation of the Duchy of Nassau by the Kingdom of Prussia in 1866. In the book Der nassauische Weinbau published in 1867 by Friedrich Wilhelm Dünkelberg a historical map Weinbau-Karte des nassauischen Rheingaus (Viticultural map of the Rheingau in the Duchy of Nassau), all known vineyards at that time had been marked up by colour, evaluated and classified in first class vineyards (I. Klasse), second class vineyards (II. Klasse) and the remaining vineyards .[4][5]

As first class vineyards (I. Klasse) only 13 Lagen in 9 boundaries had been classified:

Boundary Name of the Lage
Rauenthal Gehren, Wieshell, Rothenberg
Kiedrich Grävenberg
Erbach Marcobrunn
Hattenheim Steinberg
Johannisberg Schloss Johannisberg
Geisenheim Rotheberg
Rüdesheim Hinterhaus, Rottland, Berg
Assmannshausen Hinterkirch (Rother Wein)
Hochheim Dom-Dechanei

Villages and producers

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A Riesling 1943 wine label from Winkel. A steam boat on the Rhine.
 
Vineyards close to Rüdesheim, collectively known as Rüdesheimer Berg, as seen from the opposite side of the Rhine.

Some villages of Rheingau, listed in the downstream direction of Rhine, with some notable vineyards and producers.

  • Hochheim am Main
    • vineyards Domdechaney, Kirchenstück and Hochheimer Hölle [de]
    • Weingut Künstler
    • Weingut W. J. Schäfer
  • Walluf
    • J.B. Becker, a family owned wine-producer since 1893[6]
  • Eltville
    • Hessische Staatsweingüter Kloster Eberbach ("Hessian State Wineries Eberbach Abbey"), moved 2008 to a new cellar next to the vineyard Steinberg, Kloster Eberbach
  • Rauenthal
    • vineyards Baiken and Nonnenberg
  • Kiedrich
  • Hattenheim
    • vineyards Mannberg and Wisselbrunnen
    • vineyard Steinberg, next to Eberbach Abbey, does not use a village name in its vineyard designation
    • Hessische Staatsweingüter Kloster Eberbach has its main cellars in a newly constructed facility close to the Steinberg vineyard, after having previously been located in Eltville
    • vineyard Marcobrunn [de], is shared with the neighbouring village of Erbach
  • Oestrich
    • vineyards Doosberg and Lenchen
    • Weingut Josef Spreitzer
    • Weingut Peter Jakob Kühn
  • Winkel
    • vineyards Hasensprung and Jesuitengarten
    • Schloss Vollrads, both a producer and a vineyard name, does not use a village name in its vineyard designation
  • Johannisberg
    • Schloss Johannisberg, both a producer and a vineyard name, does not use a village name in its vineyard designation
  • Rüdesheim
  • Assmannshausen
    • vineyard Höllenberg, famous for its red wines
    • Weingut August Kesseler

Maps

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Rheingau Members Verband Deutscher Prädikatsweingüter
 
 
2km
1.2miles
34
33
32
31
30
29
28
27
25
24
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
1
Allendorf
2
Barth
3
Belz
4
Jung
5
Diefenhardt
6
Eberbach
7
Erbslöh
8
Eser
9
Fendel
10
Straßenmühle
11
Hochschule Geisenheim
12
Freimuth
13
Müller
14
Hessen
15
Hupfeld
16
Johannisberg
17
Kaufmann
18
Kessler
19
Knyphausen
20
König
21
Krone
22
Kühn
23
Künstler
24
Kunz
25
Leitz
26
Löwenstein
27
Oettinger
28
Prinz
29
Querbach
30
Ress
31
Schönleber
32
Spreitzer
33
Vollrads
34
Weil
35
Werner

Grape varieties

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A Riesling from the Rheingau using the "Feinherb" (off dry) designation.

The most cultivated grape varieties, by area in 2019, were:[8]

References

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  1. ^ Deutsches Weininstitut (2021), Statistik 2020/2021 (PDF) (in German and English), Mainz{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link), Format: PDF, KBytes: 219, accessed on October 26, 2021.
  2. ^ Wein-Plus Glossar: Rheingau, read on January 22, 2013.
  3. ^ Wein-Plus Glossar: Kloster Eberbach.
  4. ^ Daniel Deckers 2011: Die erste Lagenklassifikationskarte der Welt galt im Jahr 1867 dem Rheingau Archived 2014-03-02 at the Wayback Machine the first cadastral map for wine classification applied to the Rheingau.
  5. ^ "dilibri Rheinland-Pfalz: Der nassauische Weinbau : eine Skizze der klimatischen, Boden- u. Cultur-Verhältnisse des Rheingau's. Hrsg. von Friedrich Wilhelm Dünkelberg". Archived from the original on 2011-08-14. Retrieved 2011-03-26.
  6. ^ J.B. Becker.
  7. ^ Weingut Josef Leitz in Rüdesheim, Rheingau, holds the title for the “best white wine collection of the year” 2007 Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Landwirtschaftliche Bodennutzung - Rebflächen - Fachserie 3 Reihe 3.1.5 - 2019 [Agricultural land use - Areas under vine] (PDF). Wiesbaden, Germany: Statistisches Bundesamt. 2020.
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