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Because the wine-making facility was found surrounded by graves, the researchers suggest the wine may have been intended for ceremonial use. That made sense to McGovern, who noted that wine was the main beverage at funeral feasts and was later used for tomb offerings. Indeed, he said, "Even in lowland regions like ancient Egypt where beer reigned supreme, special wines from the Nile Delta were required as funerary offerings and huge quantities of wine were consumed at major royal and religious festivals." McGovern noted that similar vats for treading on grapes and jars for storage have been found around the Mediterranean area. In his books, McGovern has suggested that a "wine culture," including the domestication of the Eurasian grape, was first consolidated in the mountainous regions around Armenia before moving to the south.
[Associated
Press;
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