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Georgia uncovers the worth of Stalin's wine collection, which includes 40,000 bottles

In a?dim, dim light, cobwebs are tangled from the ceiling and a musky, pleasant sweetness fills the air. This repository once housed a valuable?wine collection that was owned by 'Georgia’s most infamous child,?Josef Stalin. The?Georgian Government, which owns 40,000 French and Georgian rareties, opened the wine vault in Tbilisi this week for the first. The collection includes some wines dating back to the early 19th century. It will be auctioned off and the proceeds used to fund a wine school in Georgia.

Irakli Gilauri of Gilauri Wines, who worked on the project with Georgia's Agriculture Ministry, said that the auction will help "put Georgia on collectors' maps".

South Caucasus is marketed as the birthplace for wine. Archaeological?evidence shows that winemaking has been a tradition in this region since 8,000 BCE.

Stalin, born in Georgia, led the Soviet Union between 1924 and 1953. He was a passionate wine collector and drinker.

The collection includes wines from Bordeaux estates once owned by Russia's Tsar Alexander III, and his son Nicholas. After the 1917 Russian Revolution, the Soviets took over the Imperial Romanov Collection. Stalin then became its guardian and slowly added his favourite Georgian varieties.

Victor Chen was excited to see the amber liquid in the dusty bottles. He had travelled from Dallas, Texas to 'Tbilisi.

He said: "I feel like Indiana Jones opening a cave. It could be nothing or it could be something." He was referring to the fictional archaeologist from the film franchise.

There aren't many historical moments left at this time. This could be one. Reporting by Lucy Papachristou, editing by Barbara Lewis

(source: Reuters)