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History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2009 12:13 pm
by Reidar Andersen
First of all in my entry in the other thread about cut seal, my memory served me wrong. I have only one bottle recorked by Barbeito waxed and with their seal.

My three other are like the picture above in that thread. Golden capsules and stamped with Oscar A on the top. Two of mine were leaking and I have myself recorked them. The last is perfect still ( I hope )

In Alex Liddells book it is written on page 209 under Barbeito that when Oscar A died in 1979 his wines were divided between his two sons by his first wife ( who later sold them to Christies ) and his second wife who sold them to Mario Barbeito ( this also goes for 1795 T whick also belonged to Oscar A after Hinton ).

I found an old e-mail from Ricardo Freitas ( Barbeito ) , Sep. 2001 where he says all these 1802 were bottled between 1940 and 1950 . But Barbeito bottles were recorked by them from 1993 until 1997.

I guess this above makes sense for my three orig bottling. One of the recorked had a very bad cork, the other a bit better. The third looks good. We never know if, or if , how long these bottles since the 1940’s, have been lying down ??

And now the goodie. I found an old fax form Patrick Grubb ( also in Sept 2001 ) with the original Christies offering in 1989, copy of their catalogue offering of the 1802 Oscar A Terrantez !!

A FEW QUOTES ( too much to print the whole text ) from Christies:

Thursday 15 june 1989 at 11.00 am precisely

THE OUTSTANDING “ACCIAIOLY “ MADEIRAS
The property Mr. Michael Acciaioly and Mr. David Acciaioly

The following wines are from the private cellar in Funchal, Madeira of the late Mr. Oscar Gil Borges Acciaioly. They were inherited upon his death in January 1979 by his two sons Michael and David Acciaioly, the former living in England, the brother in America. The wines were shipped to London in the autumn of 1988.

Sample bottles were tasted and giving them plenty of time to settle. Some of the corks were a little soft, but complete and effective. Every bottle was of exceptional quality . After tasting each bottle was shaken and the sediment examined. The sediment was loose , like small tea leaves , the wine was still bright; none was cloudy. Further sample bottles will be available for the pre-sale tasting.

The bottles , wrapped in tissues, were packed for shipment from Funchal to London, ten to a wooden case. They have all been checked and repacked into standard-size cartons.

Except where otherwise stated the wines are fully capsule and labeled, have branded corks and good levels.

Terrantez – 1802

Capsules embossed OSCAR ACCIAIOLY MADEIRA . Full body labels : “OSCAR’S/by appointment to H.M. King Carl Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden. TERRANTEZ SPECIAL RESERVE 1802/Fine Madeira. Produced and bottled by Oscar Acciaioly, Madeira Island. Typical short Portuguese corks, ends deeply wine stained , faintly branded OSCAR ACCIAIOLY/Madeira. “

End Quote ..

Total lots were 22, 5 lots of 1 bottle, 5 lots of 2 bottles, 4 lots of 3 bottles, 4 lots of 6 bottles, and 4 lots of 1 dozen bottles.. That should be 99 bottles.

Price realized in 1989 was £ 650 for 6 bottles and £ 1650 for a dozen. I guess there must be some plus plus ??

NOTE: Short corks..

Reidar :winepour:

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 9:42 am
by Roy Hersh
Thanks Reidar!

Nothing has been as painful as having just read your post and especially the pricing on the 1802 back then. I have a friend who bought a case of it and still has 10 bottles in his cellar. Then again, this Madeira freak has over 1100 bottles ... a mere 5 cases of which is the 1827 Q d Serrado! Too bad he lives far, but then again ... if he lived closer, I'd probably have liver failure by now. [rotfl.gif]

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 10:05 am
by Reidar Andersen
Roy,

Does he have the orig corks ( "golden" foil ) or Barbeito corks ?

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Thu Oct 29, 2009 6:36 pm
by Eric Ifune
Thanks for the information Reider.
I'm seriously looking for a bottle of this and your info is invaluable.

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 9:19 am
by Roy Hersh
Reidar,

I have no idea which corks this guy has, but I know for sure he has put some 1802 up for sale in the past 2 years at auction. Actually, he has put a LOT of Madeira up for sale at auction.

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 3:32 am
by Peter Reutter
Thanks for all the info on the 1802 T, I still hope to get one of these bottles myself one fine day...

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 11:59 am
by Reidar Andersen
He, he Peter, I have recorked two, so maybe one day I will share one of them with you :salute: .. I don't think I will be able to sell them and
say: "Guarantee it is real, I, Reidar, recorked it ! " [cheers.gif]

Re: History of Acciaioly 1802 Terrantez !

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 2:09 pm
by Peter Reutter
Reidar Andersen wrote:He, he Peter, I have recorked two, so maybe one day I will share one of them with you :salute: .. I don't think I will be able to sell them and
say: "Guarantee it is real, I, Reidar, recorked it ! " [cheers.gif]
I would trust you with the recorking anytime, Reidar, but if I can choose I'd rather take the "share-option" :D
I am still saving a small amount of that T 1839, so I'd also like to taste these two wines side by side. To bad I don't have another bottle of the Blandy T 1846, that would make for great menagerie a trois... :yumyum: