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Bartenura wine is an international brand of the Royal Wine Company, a kosher wine manufacturer. The wine is sourced from the Provincia di Pavia, Italy and is named for Rabbi Ovadia ben Avraham of Bertinoro (known as Bartenura), the 15th century Italian rabbi.[1]
This wine was the first to sell in a blue glass bottle. In 1992, it became the largest-selling wine in the kosher sector,[2] and is the single most successful kosher Italian wine brand.[3] It is exported to 32 countries.[4]
The Moscato of Bartenura was mentioned by Lil’ Kim in a song in 2005, which generated popularity among other singers. In May 2020, it became the second kosher wine to be made available in a can. The first being Rosé by J.Folk in 2020.[citation needed]
^"Wine Talk: Bartenura madness - the rise of Moscato wine". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
^"BARTENURA AND BARBERA | Israeli Wines – Pride of Israel". winesisrael.com. 4 January 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
^London, Joshua E. (8 March 2018). "Bartenura And Beyond". jewishweek.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
^"Learn More About Bartenura Winery". Kosherwine.com. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
Bartenurawine is an international brand of the Royal Wine Company, a kosher wine manufacturer. The wine is sourced from the Provincia di Pavia, Italy...
Bartenura or variants may refer to: Obadiah ben Abraham of Bartenura, a 15th-century Italian rabbi Bartenura, an Italian wine brand Bertinoro, a town...
distributor. Bartenurawine "Royal Wine to make Bayonne its global headquarters". NJ.com. 17 January 2013. Retrieved November 20, 2017. "Wine company expansion...
long ago, over the place of the Temple sanctuary and courtyard." Obadiah Bartenura says in a 1488 letter from Jerusalem that "I sought the Foundation Stone...
different types of olive oil presses, and also had a significant wine industry, with wine presses constructed next to vineyards. By contrast, the Kingdom...
Nathan ben Jehiel (1035–1106) in his Sefer ha-Arukh, s.v. ממל; Obadiah Bartenura in his commentary on Mishnah (Maaserot 1:7), as well as by Moses Margolies...
Key figures Nachmanides (d.1270) Joseph Saragossi (d. 1507) Obadiah MiBartenura (d. 1515) Abraham ben Eliezer Halevi (d. 1528) Levi ibn Habib (d. 1545)...
Nathan ben Jehiel (1035–1106) in his Sefer ha-Arukh, s.v. ממל; Obadiah Bartenura in his commentary on Mishnah (Maaserot 1:7), as well as by Moses Margolies...
Halakhist, Talmudist and physician Obadiah ben Abraham of Bertinoro, (Bartenura), (c. 1445–c.1515) 15th-century commentator on the Mishnah Ra'ah (1235–c...
Nathan ben Jehiel (1035–1106) in his Sefer ha-Arukh, s.v. ממל; Obadiah Bartenura in his commentary on Mishnah (Maaserot 1:7), as well as by Moses Margolies...
1250–1327), printed in the Mutzal Me'esh edition of the Jerusalem Talmud. The Bartenura commentary on the Mishnah by Rabbi Ovadiah ben Abraham of Bertinoro (c...
He was awarded the monopoly of the beeswax trade with Poland, and of the wine trade with Moldavia, and maneuvered in the latter country to keep princes...
included rice, flour, lentils, beans, olives and cheese. Ashkenazim stored wine, spirits, olives, sesame oil and wheat. At the end of the summer, large quantities...