Origin Syrah has a long documented history in the
Rhône region of southeastern France, but it was not known if it had originated in that region. A 1998 study conducted by
Carole Meredith's research group in the
Department of Viticulture and Enology at
University of California, Davis used
DNA typing and extensive grape reference material from
the viticultural research station in Montpellier, France to conclude that Syrah was the offspring of the grape varieties
Dureza (father) and
Mondeuse blanche (mother). region.
Dureza is believed to have originated in the
Ardèche (#1) in the southwest and moved east/northeast into
Drôme (#2) and
Isère (#3). Somewhere in this area, most likely in Isère, the vine crossed with
Mondeuse blanche, a variety native to the
Savoie region (#4), to produce Syrah. Dureza, a dark-skinned grape variety from the
Ardèche region in France, has all but disappeared from the vineyards, and the preservation of such varieties is a speciality of
Montpellier. Mondeuse blanche is a white grape variety cultivated in the
Savoie region, and is still found in small amounts in that region's vineyards today. Both varieties are somewhat obscure today, and have never achieved anything near Syrah's fame or popularity, and there is no record of them ever having been cultivated at long distances from their present homes. Thus, both of Syrah's parents come from a limited area in southeastern France, close to northern Rhône. Based on these findings, the researchers have concluded Syrah originated from northern Rhône. Pliny called the vines of this wine
Allobrogica, and it has been speculated that it could be today's Syrah. However, the description of the wine would also fit, for example, Dureza, Legends of Syrah's origins often connect it with the city of
Shiraz in
ancient Iran. The former capital of the
Persian Empire under the
Achaemenid dynasty produced the well-known
Shirazi wine, and legends claim the original grape was later brought to the
Rhône. There is a connection between the name
Syrah and the
Persian word "سیاه" (pronounced
siah or
syah, meaning "black"). It refers to the origin of this grape, which comes from black grapes and shows connection between the city of Shiraz and this grape. Another legend of the grape variety's origin, based on the name
Syrah, is that it was brought from
Syracuse by the legions of
Roman Emperor Probus sometime after 280 CE. The name "Shiraz" has been used primarily in
Australia in modern times, where it has long been established as the most grown dark-skinned variety. In Australia, it was also commonly called
Hermitage up to the late 1980s, but since that name became a French
Protected Designation of Origin, this naming practice caused a problem in some export markets and was dropped. The name "Scyras" was used to describe the grape in the earliest Australian documents, and "Shiraz" has been speculated (among others by
Jancis Robinson) So while the name or spelling "Shiraz" may be an effect of the
English language on a French name, there is no evidence that it actually originated in Australia, although it was definitely the Australian usage and the Australian wines that made the use of this name popular.
Rise to fame The wines that made Syrah famous were those from Hermitage, the hill above the town
Tain-l'Hermitage in northern Rhône, where an
hermitage (
chapel) was built on the top, and where De Stérimberg is supposed to have settled as a
hermit after his crusades. Hermitage wines have for centuries had a reputation for being powerful and excellent. While Hermitage was quite famous in the 18th and 19th centuries, and attracted interest from foreign
oenophiles, such as
Bordeaux enthusiast
Thomas Jefferson, it lost ground and foreign attention in the first half of the 20th century. In the 18th and the first half of the 19th centuries, most Hermitage wine that left France did so as a blending component in Bordeaux wines. In an era when "
clarets" were less powerful than today, and before appellation rules, red wines from warmer regions would be used for improvement (or
adulteration, depending on the point of view) of Bordeaux wines. While Spanish and Algerian wines are also known to have been used for this purpose, top Bordeaux châteaux would use Hermitage to improve their wines, especially in weaker vintages.
Arrival in Australia In 1831, the Scotsman
James Busby, often called "the Father of Australian viticulture", made a trip back to Europe to collect
cuttings from vines (primarily from France and
Spain) for introduction to Australia. One of the varieties collected by him was Syrah, although Busby used the two spellings "Scyras" and "Ciras". The cuttings were planted in the
Royal Botanic Garden, and in
Hunter Valley, and in 1839 brought from Sydney to
South Australia. By the 1860s, Syrah was established as an important variety in Australia.
Modern history Syrah continues to be the main grape of the northern Rhône and is associated with classic wines such as
Hermitage,
Cornas and
Côte-Rôtie. In the southern Rhône, it is used as a blending grape in such wines as
Châteauneuf-du-Pape,
Gigondas and
Côtes du Rhône, where
Grenache usually makes up the bulk of the blend. Although its best incarnations will
age for decades, less-extracted styles may be enjoyed young for their lively red and blueberry characters and smooth
tannin structure. Syrah has been widely used as a blending grape in the red wines of many countries due to its fleshy fruit mid-palate, balancing the weaknesses of other varieties and resulting in a "complete" wine. From the 1970s and even more from the 1990s, Syrah has enjoyed increased popularity, and plantings of the variety have expanded significantly in both old and new locations. In the early 2000s, it broke into the top 10 of varieties planted worldwide for the first time. == Shiraz wines ==