Overview
The 2002 Langmeil “The Freedom 1843” Shiraz is a powerful and historically significant Barossa Valley wine, crafted from some of the world’s oldest surviving Shiraz vines. Named in honour of the Freedom Vineyard planted in 1843, this wine represents a rare convergence of vine age, provenance, and exceptional vintage conditions. Now mature, it stands as a profound expression of Barossa Shiraz with depth, authority, and grace.
Vineyard and Winemaking
Fruit is sourced exclusively from the Freedom Vineyard in Langmeil, home to ancient, dry-grown Shiraz vines planted in 1843. These low-yielding vines produce intensely concentrated fruit. Traditional winemaking techniques were employed, with fermentation designed to preserve varietal character and structure. The wine was matured in a combination of seasoned oak barrels to allow the fruit and vineyard character to take centre stage, building complexity without overt oak dominance.
Tasting Notes
Deep garnet with brick-red hues, reflecting its maturity. The bouquet reveals layers of blackberry compote, dried plum, and fig, interwoven with notes of leather, dark chocolate, espresso, and earthy spice. The palate is rich and expansive, showing evolved dark fruit, savoury complexity, and polished tannins. The finish is long, warm, and resonant, with lingering notes of spice, earth, and mature oak.
Style and Character
This wine is a testament to the longevity and resilience of ancient Barossa vines. The 2002 vintage delivers generosity and power, tempered by time into a harmonious and contemplative expression. It is a wine of historical importance and serious collector appeal, offering a rare opportunity to experience Shiraz from vines planted in the mid-19th century.
Cellaring and Service
Drinking beautifully now at full maturity. Decant gently to remove sediment and serve at 16–18°C. Ideal for special occasions, milestone celebrations, or collectors seeking a truly historic Australian Shiraz.