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CLICK AND COLLECT + NATIONWIDE DELIVERY

ALL PACKAGING MADE OF RECYCLED, RECYCLABLE + BIODEGRADABLE MATERIALS

'Majer' | MV

£24.00
Quantity
- +

CABERNET SAUVIGNON, FRANKOVKA MODRÁ (BLAUFRÄNKISCH) + ALIBERNET
(multi vintage blend across '17-'20)

HLOHOVEK, SLOVAKIA

ORGANIC + BIODYNAMIC

12.5%  ABV 

Slobodne are a winery and farm located about an hour's drive east of Bratislava. The history of the estate is quite fascinating. Today's winemakers are making wine in the same cellar as their great great uncle was in the early 1900s. 

Back then the wines were called 'Traja Boxeri,' or 'Three Boxers,' named so after the winemaker's three dogs. The wines were quite popular especially amongst the artist and creative scene in Prague and Bratislava and the farm prospered in the early part of the 20th century. However it all took a tragic turn during WW2 - the family is Jewish, and they all ended up in concentration camps, with only one member of the family making it back alive in 1945. He tried to get the farm running again, but was faced with losing everything again 3 years later in 1948 when communism took over everything. 

The history picks up again in 1989 when communism fell. At this time, the government gave its people a 3-year window to produce any evidence of land or property that might have belonged to their families or ancestors. The current winemakers' parents succeeded in claiming back the farm in the early 90's, and have spent the last 25+ years rebuilding the ecosystem, replanting vines, resurrecting crumbling buildings, and creating what is now a bustling 350ha farm. They grow wheat, barley, rapeseed, linseed, poppy seeds, they tend to livestock, chickens, bees, and of course vines (17 hectares). 

In 2009, their children (two sisters, Agnes and Katarina) decided to leave their life in the city (Bratislava) as well as their work as accountants and lawyers to return to the farm and become full-time farmers and winemakers, along with their two partners Andrea and Miso (their logo is a representation of this lifestyle change). One year later they started Slobodne, which means 'freedom' in Slovak, or 'free winery', in homage to the estate's long and fractured history. 

The four of them (now in late 30's and early 40’s) are still running the farm and making the wines, and are continuously pushing boundaries in their experiments with natural wines. They have a particular focus on various skin-contact wines, and were the first winery in Slovakia to start working with Georgian qvevri and Spanish Tinajas.