One of five restored bottles by iconic French wine house Château d'Yquem from the 19th-century is presented at the Becov castle this week in the village of Becov nad Teplou, Czech Republic. Eight bottles of a legendary French wine that survived World War II and decades of communist rule hidden under a Czech castle floor have been restored by the chateau that produced them some 130 years ago.
Eight bottles of a legendary French wine that survived World War II and decades of communist rule hidden under a Czech castle floor have been lovingly restored by the chateau that produced them some 130 years ago.
The bottles of Chateau d'Yquem - one of the world's most expensive, highly-prized sweet white wines - are a part of a collection of 136 bottles discovered at the western Czech castle of Becov nad Teplou in the 1980s, slated to go on display in the future.
The collection once belonged to the noble Beaufort-Spontin family, who left the old Czechoslovakia hastily at the end of the war when they were suspected of having collaborated with the Nazis.
The wine spent decades hidden under the floorboards of the castle chapel alongside the shrine of St Maurus before communist secret police found them in 1985.










