Saxon Wine Queen

The Saxon Wine Queen 2014/2015, Michaela Tutschke (c) and her wine princesses, Kati Hoffmann (l) and Jana Jordan (r)

The Saxon Wine Queen (German: Sächsische Weinkönigin) is a woman from the wine industry who is chosen for a year to represent the wine region of Saxony in Germany. In the year following her 'reign' she is entitled to run for election as the German Wine Queen.

Process

The election of the Saxon Wine Queen takes place annually in November in the stock exchange at Coswig. Until 2011, it took place in the central inn at Weinböhla. The second and third-placed candidates become the Saxon Wine Princesses. Until 2010/2011 the third-placed candidate was also named as the Saxon Sekt Princess (Sächsische Sektprinzessin). After a year in office, the Saxon Wine Queen, along with the other 12 regional wine queens, may participate in the elections for the German Wine Queen.

Saxon wine queens

Evelyn Schmidt, Saxon Wine Queen in 2006/07 and German Wine Queen in 2007/08

Royal vineyard

The reigning Saxon Wine Queen owns her own vineyard: the vineyard, called the Rote Presse, is part of the Meißner Kapitelberg vineyard in the Spaargebirge hills, in the municipality of Oberspaar in the southeast of the borough of Meissen. Not far from the top of the Deutsche Bosel, a hill with a good viewing point, are the steep, terraced slopes of the vineyard, recognisable from afar from a little, yellow and ochre coloured vineyard house, the so-calles Swallow's Nest (Schwalbennest).

Some of the grapes harvested there are worked by the Saxon Wine Queen, who also uses it for representative purposes. Until 2011 the grape variety grown was a Riesling. On the occasion of the 850th anniversary of Saxon viticulture, the variety used for the 'royal' wine was changed to a Traminer, the oldest type of Saxon grape and one that is typical of Saxon wine growing.[1]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saxon Wine Queen.

References

  1. Das „Schloss“ der Sächsischen Weinkönigin und ihr eigener Wein; Das Schwalbennest im Spaargebirge. at the Wayback Machine (archived October 24, 2013)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.