By bicycle through the land of wine and history.

1200 km across the vineyards and orchards of South Moravia.

Mutěnice

About the willage

Mutěnice - The heart of wine region of Slovácko

A-MutěniceThe founding charter for this settlement has not yet been located and thus the first reference to the settlement appears in Moravian land documents from the year 1367. Grape growing was established and developed in Mutěnice thanks to the orders of Knights Templar and the Knights of Malta, who owned the village at the very start of its existence. The further development of local viticulture was greatly improved by the settlement of Moravian Anabaptists called ‘Habáni’ in the second half of the 16th century. By contrast, the consequences of the Thirty Years War had a negative impact on the country as a whole and naturally also on viticulture in Moravia. The records of land registry visits from 1671 inform us that the wine settlement of Mutěnice had 98 inhabited IMG_0407estates before the war. Twenty years after the war, there were only 36 inhabited estates and the locals abandoned viticulture altogether. The industry of the local population and ideal conditions for growing grapes meant that vineyards were not left unattended for long. As early as 1844, the wine mountains of Vyšicko, Dubňanská Hora, Hraničky, Zárybnické and others were planted with almost 200 hectares of grapevine. The privileged position of viticulture in the settlement was confirmed by the establishment of the State and Regional Viticulture School at the beginning of the 20th century, and the opening of a state and regional central model cellar. At present, Mutěnice with its 340 hectares of registered vine tracks ranks first among wine settlements in the region of Slovácko and the geographic location of the village with large areas of vine-covered hillsides renders it the heart of the territory, a transition point between southern and northern vine growing regions in Moravia.    

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About the wine-cellar lane

Painted ‘žudras’ (small arched decorated projection over an entrance into a cellar) of Ján Lacko

Since the beginning of the 18th century a complex of cellars and ‘búdas’ have been growing under the Zárybnické vineyards. Solitary cellars were dug in several rows, single-storey ‘búdas’IMG_0409 were constructed of earth rammed into wooden boarding (“nabíjanica”) and at the beginning of the 20th century they were still covered by a thatched hip roof protruding over the front and supported by wooden columns. In this way, a front porch was created where one could sit and chat. The front wall was divided by a massive wooden two-leaved door and a single window. In front of the door, there was a small slat gate guarding the entrance when the house was aired. The whitewashed front of the pressing house was circumscribed by a green stripe at the bottom. This favourite colour in the settlement was often used to paint the gable, door and windows. The ‘búda’ had a single room inside, an earthen floor and a ceiling constructed of wooden beams supported by a grid and column. At the end of the 19th century, the colony of cellar ‘búdas’ began to merge with houses at the lower end of the vilIMG_0391lage and many búdas were converted into houses in the end. Other renovations and extensions of cellars took place in the 1930s. Thatched roofs were replaced by burnt roof tiles, massive screw presses were gradually removed from pressing houses and the búda was divided into work and relaxation sections. The pressing houses were fitted with a ‘žudro’ (see the dictionary at the end) and window jambs. These constructional elements of búda n. 300 were decorated by an important regional artist, Jano Köhler. Common decorative elements in the complex are vegetable and figurative motifs placed on žudras and the fronts of the houses.  These were often scratched out on the red and brown undercoat by local artist Ján Lacko. About 500 cellars currently make up a picturesque wine village with a pub and several boarding houses.  And guests are also welcomed in style, especially those travelling along the Mutěnice wine trail from the settlement of Čejč – the cellar colony is preceded by the impressive scenery of vineyards located on the southern hillsides of the Zárybnická  wine mountain (Zárybnická Vinná Hora).

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Interest

Invitation for a glass of Slovácký Granát

I experienced the atmosphere of the lane on Easter Saturday on the eve of Easter – it was a celebration of conviviality and hospitability. I heard singing, loud talking and laughter from afar. The first cellars were alreIMG_0386ady lined with wine makers holding wine tastings, a good mood prevailed. I joined a group of tourists who were savouring Chardonnay. Hillsides around Mutěnice and the typical composition of the local soil give this variety its golden colour, fullness and distinctive acids. I also found it impossible to refuse an amicable invitation to a glass of Slovácký Granát in the front of the neighbouring cellar. The local specialty, mixture of Lemberger and Blauer Portigieser, year 2002, was an extractive and ripe wine of excellent taste. Let the genuine hospitality and the hedonic charm of local wine makers be an invitation for everybody who arrives at Mutěnice while travelling along the wine trails. 

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Festivities related to wine

Festivities related to wine

Exhibition and tasting of wines (March)

Vintage in Mutěnice (September)

Wine days in Mutěnice with initiation of the mountain (September)

St Catharine’s feast (October)

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Photo-gallery

Coordinator

www.nadacepartnerstvi.cz

General partner

www.nadacecs.cz

Senior partner

www.geodis.cz

Media partner

www.rozhlas.cz/brno

Other partners

www.wineofczechrepublic.czwww.vinarskyfond.cz

   www.kolopro.czwww.planstudio.cz

www.infodomovina.cz

Support

http://www.strukturalni-fondy.cz/

www.kr-jihomoravsky.cz

The project "Wine-Cellar Lanes in South Moravia" was cofinanced by the European Union and the South Moravian Region