HENGSHUI CITY, CHINA—Xinhua reports that a large-scale winery first used in the late Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) and into the 1950s has been uncovered in northern China by a team of researchers led by Hu Qiang of the Hebei Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. The winery site is comprised of tanks, pits, drying fields, and underground distillation stoves. Objects made of ceramic, metal, glass, and shell were also recovered. For more on wine and spirits throughout history, go to "Alcohol Through the Ages."
400-Year-Old Winery Site Investigated in China
News December 30, 2021
Recommended Articles
Features November/December 2023
China's River of Gold
Excavations in Sichuan Province reveal the lost treasure of an infamous seventeenth-century warlord
 
									Digs & Discoveries May/June 2017
The Buddha of the Lake
 
									Digs & Discoveries November/December 2025
Ancient Look Book
 
									Digs & Discoveries September/October 2025
A Chinese Frontier Fort
 
									- 
											Features November/December 2021 Italian Master BuildersA 3,500-year-old ritual pool reflects a little-known culture’s agrarian prowess  (Ministero della Cultura) (Ministero della Cultura)
- 
											Features November/December 2021 Ghost Tracks of White SandsScientists are uncovering fossilized footprints in the New Mexico desert that show how humans and Ice Age animals shared the landscape  (Jerry Redfern) (Jerry Redfern)
- 
											Features November/December 2021 Piecing Together Maya Creation StoriesThousands of mural fragments from the city of San Bartolo illustrate how the Maya envisioned their place in the universe  (Digital image by Heather Hurst) (Digital image by Heather Hurst)
- 
											Features November/December 2021 Gaul's University TownNew excavations have revealed the wealth and prestige of an ancient center of learning  (Digital image by Heather Hurst) (Digital image by Heather Hurst)
 
		 
								