While
negro is from an
Italian and
Latin word meaning "black", there is some dispute as to whether
amaro is from the Italian word for "bitter" or whether it derives from the ancient
Greek mavro also meaning "black". If the latter theory is correct,
mavro may share a root with
merum, a wine brought to Apulia by
Illyrian colonists before the Greeks arrived in the 7th century BC. Horace and other Roman writers mention
mera tarantina from
Taranto, and
Pliny the Elder describes
Manduria as
viticulosa (full of vineyards). But after the fall of the Roman Empire winemaking declined until it was only kept alive in the monasteries - Benedictine on
Murgia and Greek Orthodox in Salento. Negroamaro could be the grape used in
merum, or it could have been brought by traders from the home of wine-making in
Asia Minor at any point in the last 8,000 years.
Negroamaro precoce has recently been identified as a distinct clone.
RAPD analysis suggests that the cultivar is loosely related to
Verdicchio (
Verdeca) and
Sangiovese. ==Distribution and wines==