Czech castle's cache of precious wine goes on display in new-old bottles


Bottles of 19th-century wine are kept on shelves in a cellar of Becov castle, as State Castle and Chateau of Becov nad Teplou, where the restored Chateau d'Yquem wine collection, discovered in 1985 and linked to the Beaufort-Spotin family, is presented to the public following a complex restoration with French experts in Becov nad Teplou, Czech Republic, June 1, 2026 REUTERS/Eva Korinkov

BECOV NAD TEPLOU, Czech Republic, ⁠June 2 (Reuters) - A collection of late 19th-century wine that for years was ⁠hidden away under a chapel floor in the Czech Republic's Becov castle ‌has been painstakingly restored by prestigious French winery Château d’Yquem and is on public display.

The 133 bottles, most dating from 1892 to 1899, were discovered in 1985 where they had been hidden at the ​end of World War Two by the then ⁠owners of Becov castle, close to ⁠the border with Germany.

Toni El Khawand, Chateau d’Yquem Cellar Master, said the cache had ⁠provided ‌perfect conditions for keeping the wine.

Its quality was proven when it was tested in 2016 using the Coravin device that extracts a sample through a ⁠needle, piercing the cork without damaging it.

"It benefited from ​very good conditions of ‌conservation, in this old chapel, I think very humid and very cold, with ⁠thick walls, ​and also underground so it preserved the moisture and temperature in a very constant way. Those were excellent conditions to store a wine," he said.

Chateau d’Yquem has recorked several bottles, but ⁠El Khawand said the restoration had been scrupulously ​authentic down to preserving the dust on the bottles.

The wine will be on display at Becov castle, once the home of the Beaufort-Spontin family. The family was labelled Nazi ⁠sympathisers and the castlewas taken over by then-Czechoslovakia.

The Beaufort-Spontins hid their wine alongside a reliquary of St. Maurus, which is said to hold the bones of St John the Baptist, and fled to Austria.

In 1984, the family approached an American businessman, Danny ​Douglas, to help get the hidden treasure back, and ⁠he applied secretly on their behalf to retrieve an unknown object from an unknown location.

After ​a back-and-forth with authorities over permitting, police eventually ‌realised where Douglas was looking and what treasure ​he was seeking, leading to the collection's discovery.

(Reporting by Radan Sprongl, additional reporting by Jan Lopatka; Writing by Jason Hovet; editing by Barbara Lewis)

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