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A Brief History of the
Grape and Its Uses
Dr. S. Kaan Kurtural
N 308D Dept. Horticulture
University of Kentucky
[email protected]
I. Introduction
 
1. History and Importance
Definitions
 
 
Definition
Viticulture: of Latin origin
 
 
Vitis: Grapevine
Oenology: of Greek origin
 
Oenos: wine
1.a. History
 
 
 
Cultivation began during Neolithic era
(6000-6500 BC).
4000 BC viticulture extends from
Transcaucasia to Asia Minor, through Fertile
Crescent to the Nile Delta
By 1700 BC King Hammurabi of Babylon
establishes rules of wine trade
Figure 1. Origins of cultivation
The Grapevine in Europe
 
 
ca. 3000 BC Hittites migrate from Anatolia to
Crete, Bosporus to Thrace.
Greeks and Phoenicians extend grapevine
culture to
 
Carthage, Sicily, southern Italy, Spain and France
Figure 2. Migration of the grapevine
Figure 3. Migration of the grapevine
westward
Figure 5. Migration of the grapevine
from Greece onward
Grapevine in Europe
 
Under the influence of the Roman Empire
viticulture spread throughout Europe through
the valley of Rhine and into Germany
Grapevine in the Middle Ages and
on…
 
 
 
 
AD 500-1500 fall of the Roman Empire
Viticulture and wine making in monasteries
Drinking wine outgrew religious associations
and entrenched in culture as a social custom
Viticulture grew steadily from 16th to 19th
century.
1.b. Importance
 
 
Integral part of human society
Most important fruit crop grown in the world
Table 1. World Statistics 1999
Country
Acres(x1000)
Rank
Wine
(Million gallons)
Rank
France
2258
2
1591
1
Italy
2246
3
1534
2
Spain
2916
1
863
3
USA
905
5
534
4
Argentina
514
10
420
5
Germany
262
20
325
6
Australia
304
16
225
7
South Africa
210
18
210
8
Portugal
647
7
206
9
Turkey
1488
4
534
40
Figure 6. Grape Acreage in 2002,
USDA
Figure 7. Grape Production in 2002,
USDA
2. Uses
 
Many uses
 
 
 
 
 
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 
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Fresh fruit
Dried fruit
Fresh grape juice
Concentrated grape juice
Wine
Distilled liquors
Grapeseed oils
Anthocyanin pigments
Ethanol production
Focus on uses
 
1) Table grapes
 
 
Account for <12% of total production
Ten largest producing countries
 
 
 
 
 
Italy (17%), Russia (14%), Turkey (12%), Spain (6%), USA
(5%), Bulgaria (5%), Japan (5%), Greece (4%), Brazil (3%) and
France (3%).
Mainly consumed in countries grown
Fruit highly perishable, transportation costs are high
therefore only 14% exported.
Per capita consumption 10kg
In Europe and N. America fresh grape consumption
represents 5% of the annual fresh fruit consumption
Focus on uses
 
2) Dried fruit
 
Raisin
 
 
Seedless cultivars of ‘Thompson seedless’ and ‘Black
Corinth’ (currants).
World-wide production 700,000 metric tonnes.
 
 
4 tonnes of fresh grapes yield 1 tonne of raisins.
Limited to latitudes 30N and 39N in northern hemisphere and
28S and 36S in the southern hemisphere….
 
Varities require high temperatures for inflorescence formation and
high yields. Also, hot dry weather require for drying.
Focus on uses
 
3) Wine
 
 
 
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 
 
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 
World production 27500 megaliters
Little change in area devoted to wine grape production in last 20
years
A decline in viticulture in France, Spain and Algeria has been
balanced by an increase in Russia, China and Australasia.
World wine production increased 35% since 1951.
Europe (Italy, France, Spain and Russia) accounts for 80% of total
world production.
Main consumers of wine are the producing countries.
About 14% of wine is exported.
In some countries large quantities are distilled to produce spirits
(cognac, armagnac, brandy, ouzo, raki, arak) to control the market.
3. Classification
 
Family: Vitaceae
 
 
11 genera, about 600 species
Genus: Vitis
 
 
Only food bearing genus in the family
Habit: Woody liana (climbing vine)
Genus: Vitis
 
 
 
Woody, perennial deciduous vines that have
tendrils many opposite leaves
Flowers are pentamerous flowers and parts
thereof.
Leaves are simple and palmately lobed.
Figure 7. Grape flower
Grape flower/infructescence
Figure 8. Grape leaf
Genus Vitis and its subgenera
Vitis
Euvitis
2n=38
Muscadinia
2n=40
Differences between Euvitis and
Muscadinia
Euvitis
Muscadinia
Lenticels
Absent
Present
Tendrils
Forked
Simple
Seeds
Ovoid-shaped
Oblong-shaped
Pith
Discontinuous
Continuous
Tangential
Radial
Specific gravity of the
wood
<1
>1
Number of species
identified
60
3
Even ripening
Extended maturation
Elongated clusters w/
wings
Small clusters
Phloem fibers
Ripening
Cluster architecture
Pith differences
Euvitis
Diaphragm
Muscadinia
Major species
 
1) Native American species
 
Characteristics
 
 
 
 
Cold hardy
Disease resistant
Fruits have lower sugars, higher acids and berries are
slip-skin
About 30 species have been identified
 
V. labrusca, V. aestivalis, V. riparia, V.berlandieri
2) European species
 
Characteristics
 
 
 
 
 
Cold tender
Longer growing season w/ dry summers and low
relative humidity, free of rain
Susceptible to many of the diseases
About 5000 species have been identified
Limited between 20N and 51N in the northern
hemisphere. 70% of production in Europe
European species
‘Cabernet Franc’
‘Viognier’
3) French-American hybrids
 
Characteristics
 
 
 
 
 
Selected for tolerance to phylloxera
Tolerance to many of the fungal diseases of N.
American origin
Cold hardy
Overbearers
Interspecific crosses between many native
American species and V. vinifera
French-American hybrids
‘Chambourcin’
‘Chardonel’
French-American hybrids cont.
 
French-American
hybrids from France
 
 
 
 
 
 
Chambourcin
Seyval
Vidal Blanc
Chancellor
Vignoles
Villard Blanc
 
American – French
hybrids from the US
 
 
 
Chardonnel
Cayuga White
Traminette
4. Muscadine grapes
 
Characteristics
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Musky flavour
Disease and insect ‘immune’
Long flowering period (May to June)
Small clusters, large seeds
Berries tend to shatter due to uneven ripening
200 day growing season
Three species identified
Requires a moderate climate FL, MS, LA, NC
Kentucky Viticulture Industry
 
http://www.uky.edu/Ag/Horticulture/comfruit.html#grapes