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                                              Sicily, Island Region, Italy

ARGENTINA

2-2-10go

La Rareza

 

CALIFORNIA
Casa Carneros
Cloud 9 Winery

Deux Amis

Mario Perelli-Minetti
Pendleton Winery
Raymond Burr

Terra Bella

 

CHILE

Crucero

 

France

Three Winds Wines

 

ITALY

La Piazza
Le Poese

 

New Zealand

Sileni Estate Winery

 

SOUTH AFRICA
Phambili 

 

MDM Gulf Relief
Gulf Relief Collection

 

ABOUT WINE

Appellation Guide

Food and Wine Pairing

Wine Education

The flag of Sicily was first adopted in 1282, after the Sicilian Vespers of Palermo. It is characterized by the presence of the triskelion (trinacria) in its middle, the (winged) head of Medusa and three wheat ears. The three bent legs are supposed to represent good luck and prosperity.

 

 

Wineries from
Sicily

La Piazza

Sicily:
The Ancient Volcanic Island

History and Tradition
One of the first inhabited areas of Italy, Sicily was named after the ancient
Siculians
who introduced agriculture and animal husbandry in the 3rd millennium B.C. The Phoenicians came next; they founded a number of commercial centers and started intensive exploitation of the forests for construction of settlements and boats.

Between the Eighth and Third centuries B.C., the Greeks, who sometimes referred to the Island as Trinacria, a reference to the region's triangular shape, ruled the island. They founded numerous colonies and developed commerce and agriculture.

The Romans were the next colonizers to inhabit and control the island, making Sicily the granary of the empire. They built new roads and re-enforced the already existing settlements and agricultural and commercial systems.

Starting from 827 A.D., repeated attacks by Arabic pirates prompted the fortification and enlargement of Palermo's port. The city itself was rebuilt several times, prompting a period of island-wide growth and expansion. The spread of irrigation, introduction of jasmine, citrus, cotton and other new cultivated crops contributed to an overall increase in agricultural production.

The Normans inhabited Sicily next, and later the Germans, continuing the improvements to the island, but under the subsequent Angevin, Aragon and Spanish domination, the trend was reversed. Sicily in the end became a Spanish colony and agriculture languished as the land was parceled into large estates characterized by low productivity.

In the 19th century the criminal organization famous all over the world as the Mafia was born and, when Sicily became a part of the newly born Italian state in 1860, they took real territorial control of the island.

After the WWII the Italian government conducted a program of economic development for Sicily. Wide estates were re-parceled into smaller units, and the coastal lands reclaimed and transformed into cultivable fields. Industrialized cities, construction of new roads and railways, along with the development of tourist industries has helped to improve the overall quality of life on the island.

The Wines
Sicily has more vineyards than any of the other Italian regions competing with Apulia for first place as the largest wine producer. Yet, Sicilians consume less wine per capita than any other Italian.

Many grapes are made into raisins, used in local cooking, and Sicilian grapes also play a large role in creating dessert wines, which require a higher concentration of grapes and are consumed in smaller quantities. In fact, in the world of international wine, Sicily is renowned for the many outstanding dessert wines, such as the world-famous Marsala.

 Wine Regions Represented by MDM

Apulia Languedoc, France Lodi, CA Monterey, Ca Piedmonte, IT Sicily Sierra Foothills, CA Sonoma, CA Southern Oregon Tuscany, IT Veneto, IT Victoria, AU

 

 

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