Sovetskoye Shampanskoye
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Sovetskoye Shampanskoye (Советское Шампанское, 'Soviet Champagne') is a generic brand of sparkling wine produced in the Soviet Union and successor states. It was produced for many years as a state-run initiative. Typically the wine is made from a blend of Aligoté and Chardonnay grapes.
After the Soviet Union dissolved, private corporations in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine purchased the rights to use "Soviet Champagne" as a brand name and began manufacturing once again. "Soviet Champagne" is still being produced today by those private companies, using the original generic title as a brand name.
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[edit] History
Russian Tsar Pavel I first brought together Crimean vines and French master Champagne-makers but it was a 'White Russian' or Belarusian aristocrat, Prince Golitsyn, who established the first economically successful Russian sparkling wine at Abrau-Dyurso. So successful was Golitsyn that in 1900 at the Paris World Fair, Russian sparkling wine defeated all the French entries to claim the internationally coveted 'Grand Prix de Champagne'.[citation needed]
When the Russian revolution swept the Bolsheviks to power in October 1917 the industry was nearly washed away but Prince Golitsyn’s creation was saved by an apprentice who hid behind the wine barrels and by saving himself, saved Golitsyn's sparkling wine-making secrets.[citation needed] As the Soviet Union developed, the Socialist Republics were provided with their own sparkling wine companies, to produce the new Sovetskoye Shampanskoye, or 'champagne for the people'.
[edit] Legal status
In Latvia the Supreme Court has ruled that Latvijas Balzams, a local producer of Sovetskoye Shampanskoye, has sole right to use the trademark in Latvia.[1] In other former Soviet republics, the use of the brand is not restricted. Several producers use the name, including wine producers from Italy and Spain.
Under European Union law, as well as treaties accepted by most nations, sparkling wines produced outside the champagne region, even wine produced in other parts of France, do not have the right to use the term "champagne". In much of the former Soviet Union, including the three Baltic States, who are now EU members, the term Sovetskoye Shampanskoye continues to be used, with the governments of those countries claiming that the rights to the use of the word “Champagne” was granted in perpetuity to the Russian Imperial Government by the French and that this cannot be rescinded.
Among the best known brands are Odessagne, imported from wineries in Odessa built by the French to supply the Russian nobility, and Sparkling 1917, a brut sparkling wine made in Belarus with wine from Moldova, imported into the UK and rebranded for British tastes.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Court orders L.I.O.N. & Ko to withdraw Sovetskoje Shampanskoje from the market - The Supreme Court has upheld the claim of Latvijas Balzams to ban sale of Sovetskoje Shampanskoje that is distributed by L.I.O.N.& Ko. (Google cache)

