The History of Champagne
CHAMPAGNE WAS A REGION long before it was a sparkling wine. The region
lies at a crossroads of northern Europe – the river valleys leading
south to the Mediterranean and north to Paris, the English Channel and
Western Germany – and thus has been the setting of many dramatic events
in the history of the French nation. As a convenient access point, it
has been for hundreds of years, the chosen path of many invaders
including Attila the Hun. The Hundred Years' War and the Thirty Years'
War brought repeated destruction to the region as armies marched back
and forth across its landscape. By the 17th century, the city of Reims
has seen destruction seven times and Epernay no less than twenty-five
times. 
But crossroads also bring trade. Champagne gained importance in its own
right, during the middle ages as a center of European trade. The
medieval counts of Champagne were wise enough to encourage commerce and
strong enough to protect the traveling merchants. They created the then
famous, Fairs of Champagne. Though these fairs were mainly about cloth,
they were of obvious benefit for the wines of Champagne as it gave them
easy exposure and access to important wine markets.  Champagne
also benefited when the cathedral at Reims was chosen in 987 AD, as the
coronation site for the French king Hugh Capet and establishing Reims
as the spiritual capital of medieval France. In fact, thirty-seven
kings of France were crowned there between 816 and 1825. The
monasteries in Champagne with the economic assistance of the crown,
were to make wine production a serious venture until the French
Revolution in 1789. Before the mid-1600's there was no
Champagne as we think of it. For centuries the wines were still wines
and were held in high regard by the nobility of Europe. But the cool
climate of the region and its effect on the wine making process was to
play an important part in changing all of that. We
owe a lot to Dom Pérignon as any inventor owes those who have come
before him. He is not however the inventor of champagne as is often
thought. Pierre Pérignon was a Benedictine monk who, in 1688, was
appointed treasurer at the Abby of Hautvillers. The Abby is located
near Epernay. Included in Dom Pérignon's duties was the management of
the cellars and wine making. The bubbles in the wine are a natural
process arising from Champagne's cold climate and short growing season.
Of necessity, the grapes are picked late in the year. This doesn't
leave enough time for the yeasts present on the grape skins to convert
the sugar in the pressed grape juice into alcohol before the cold
winter temperatures put a temporary stop to the fermentation process.
With the coming of Spring's warmer temperatures, the fermentation is
again underway, but this time in the bottle. The refermentation creates
carbon-dioxide which now becomes trapped in the bottle, thereby
creating the sparkle. For Dom Pérignon and his contemporaries,
sparkling wine was not the desired end product. It was a sign of poor
wine making. He spent a great deal of time trying to prevent the
bubbles, the unstableness of this "mad wine," and the creation of a
decidedly white wine the court would prefer to red burgundy. He was not
able to prevent the bubbles, but he did develop the art of blending. He
not only blended different grapes, but the juice from the same grape
grown in different vineyards. Not only did he develop a method to press
the black grapes to yield a white juice, he improved clarification
techniques to produce a brighter wine than any that had been produced
before. To help prevent the exploding bottle problem, he began to use
the stronger bottles developed by the English and closing them with
Spanish cork instead of the wood and oil-soaked hemp stoppers then in
use. Dom Pérignon died in 1715, but in his 47 years as the cellar
master at the Abby of Hautvillers, he laid down the basic principles
still used in making Champagne today. Although sparkling
Champagne was only about 10% of the region's output in the 18th
century, it was enjoyed increasingly as the wine of English and French
royalty and the lubricant of preference at aristocratic gatherings. Its
popularity continued to grow until, in the 1800's, the sparkling wine
industry was well established.
The
face of the industry really began to change when Louis XV allowed the
transport of wine in bottles in 1728. A year later, Ruinart became the
first recorded Champagne house. By 1735, a royal ordinance was
instituted to dictate the size, shape, and weight of champagne bottles,
the size of the cork they should use and that they be secured with
strong pack thread to the collar of the bottle. Claude Moët founded, in
1743, what was to become the largest champagne house today, the House
of Moët.
The complexity and capital intensity of making
champagne ultimately lead to the replacement of the monastic and
aristocratic growers with the champagne merchants. With their capital,
the merchant's or maisons, had to ability to perfect the otherwise
still unpredictable fermentation process, age, distribute, market and
export the wine.
Dégorgement was first practiced in 1813. It
was perfected in 1818 by the Widow Clicquot's cellar master Antoine
Muller. He developed a process of "riddling" the wine in order to get
the sediment of dead yeast cells into the neck of the bottle so it
could be removed without the time consuming task of decanting each
bottle. This process also saved most of the gas.
The 1820's and
30's saw the use of corking machines and wine muzzles. Finally in 1836,
a pharmacist in Châlons-sur-Marne, M. François, invented an instrument,
called a sucere-oenométre, to measure the amount of sugar in wine. With
this invention, the amount of sugar needed to stimulate the second
fermentation could be reliably determined, and the bottle burst-rate
dropped to 5%. It was now a little more safe to take a spring walk
through a champagne cellar.
In the 1920's four well known
houses were established – Bollinger, Irroy, Mumm, and Joseph Perrier.
By 1853 total sales of sparkling champagne reached 20 million bottles
up from just 300,000 bottles at the turn of the century.
World
War I again brought devastation to the region. The early months of the
war saw a rapid German advance into northern France and during the fall
of 1914, they were camped south of the river Marne. By 1915 they were
driven back just north of the city of Reims. The enormous caves – Roman
chalk quarries – beneath Reims that were used for the storage and
production of champagne, now became shelters from the 1000 days of
bombardment the city endured from 1914 to 1918. After the war, the city
had to be completely rebuilt.
The
years after the Great War were difficult. The Bolshevik Revolution in
Russia, Prohibition in the United States, and then the Great Depression
saw the champagne market dry up. The champagne houses stopped buying
grapes, so the growers formed the first champagne cooperatives at this
time. With the ending of Prohibition in 1934, the industry began to
turn around. The influential head of Moét & Chandon, Robert-Jean de
Vougë, was most instrumental in securing its future. He proposed that
the purchase price of champagne grapes be set at a level that ensured a
decent living for the growers, and in 1941, during the German
occupation of France, became the driving force in persuading the
Germans to establish the very successful Comité Interprofessional du
Vin de Champagne – C.I.C.C.
Since World War II champagne sales
have climbed upwards, nearly quadrupling between 1945 and 1966.
Champagne has trickled down the social scale and is no longer
considered just a luxury. Today, more champagne is being drunk, by more
people, than at any previous time in history. The new millennium looks
good for champagne.
A Vos Sabres!
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