Château Rauzan-Ségla

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Château Rauzan-Ségla

Château Rauzan-Ségla (until 1994 Château Rau s an-Ségla) is a Deuxième Cru Classé in the Margaux wine-growing region in Bordeaux . The estate covers an area of ​​66 hectares , of which 52 hectares are planted with vines.

The average age of the vines is 27 years (as of 2008). The tillering is classic with the grape varieties Cabernet Sauvignon (54%), Merlot (41%), Cabernet Franc (1%) and Petit Verdot (4%). The wines are aged for 18 to 20 months in barriques , 60 percent of which are renewed annually.

The second wine of the estate is called Ségla . Around 120,000 bottles of the Grand Vin and 120,000 bottles of the second wine are bottled each year .

In the 1960s the estate had a quality crisis. With new stainless steel tanks, new cellars for winemaking, better vines, strict selection of the grapes and a new team, the estate managed to rise again to the elite of Bordeaux wineries in the 1980s .

The 2005 vintage was rated quite high with 94 Parker points .

history

On September 7, 1661, Pierre des Mesures de Rausan, an important trader in the region, acquired the estate from the de Gassies family. The de Gassies family was close to the feudal lords of the Seigneurie de Margaux. This winery was the origin of the now known Château Rauzan-Gassies , Château Rauzan-Ségla, Château Desmirail and Château Marquis de Terme . Pierre des Mesures de Rausan was also the tenant of Château Margaux (since 1661) and Château Latour (since 1679). The still existing wine cellar also dates from this period. When Pierre des Mesures de Rausan died on May 10, 1692, his daughter Thérèse inherited vineyards in Pauillac (the later wineries Château Pichon-Longueville-Baron and Château Pichon-Longueville-Comtesse de Lalande ). Her 3 brothers Simon, Jude-Jean and Simon-Jude managed the Rozan estate in Margaux. Due to the wedding of Miss Rauzan du Ribail with Jean Desmirail and another family member with Seigneur de Peguilhan, Château Desmirail and Château Marquis de Terme were split off from the brothers' large Margaux property. The official separation of Rauzan-Gassies and Rauzan-Ségla took place on April 24, 1763. The deed was signed by Jean Baptiste de Rauzan (for the Ségla share) and Jean Roulier (for the Gassies share).

Marie-Anne de Briet married Philippe Simon de Rauzan (Jean-Baptiste's son), but separated 10 years later. With the help of her former in-laws, she took over the management of the Ségla share in 1778.

On the occasion of a visit to Bordeaux in 1787, the later US President Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) visited the winery (Jefferson described the estate under the name Rozan ) and classified it in the second category .

After the estate changed hands several times (the famous Cruse trading family owned the estate as well as the Holt group), the estate was transferred to the Château Rauzan-Ségla SA corporation in 1994. It is a subsidiary of the Chanel group through the Wertheimer family .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Data sheet  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF) Rauzan-Ségla@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.rauzan-segla.com  
  2. Clive Coates : The wines of Bordeaux. Vintages and tasting notes 1952–2003 . 1st edition. University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 0-297-84317-6 , pp. 169 .
  3. ^ Memoir, Correspondence, And Miscellanies, From The Papers Of Thomas Jefferson, Gutenberg Project

    “Of Red wines, there are four vineyards of the first quality; viz. 1. Chateau Margau, belonging to the Marquis d'Agincourt, who makes about one hundred and fifty tons, of one thousand bottles each. He has engaged to Jernon, a merchant. 2. La Tour de Segur, en Saint Lambert, belonging to Monsieur Miresmenil, who makes one hundred and twenty-five tons. 3. Hautbrion, belonging to two thirds to M. le Comte de Femelle, who has engaged to Barton, a merchant: the other third to the Comte de Toulouse, at Toulouse. The whole is seventy-five tons. 4. Chateau de la Fite, belonging to the President Pichard, at Bordeaux, who makes one hundred and seventy-five tons. The wines of the three first, are not in perfection till four years old: those of de la Fite, being somewhat lighter, are good at three years; that is, the crop of 1786 is good in the spring of 1789. These growths, of the year 1783, sell now at two thousand livres the ton; those of 1784, on account of the superior quality of that vintage, sell at twenty-four hundred livres; those of 1785, at eighteen hundred livres; those of 1786, at eighteen hundred livres, though they had sold at first for only fifteen hundred livres. Red wines of the second quality, are Rozan , Dabbadie or Lionville, la Rose, Quirouen, Durfort; in all eight hundred tons, which sell at one thousand livres, new. The third class, are Galons, Mouton, Gassie, Arboete, Pontette, de Ferme, Candale; in all two thousand tons, at eight or nine hundred livres. After these, they are reckoned common wines, and sell from five hundred livres, down to one hundred and twenty livres, the ton. All red wines decline after a certain age, losing color, flavor, and body. Those of Bordeaux begin to decline at about seven years old. "

    - Thomas Jefferson