Market town in the wine-growing region of Mittelburgenland (Austria) with the cadastral municipality of Haschendorf. The Celts and Romans already cultivated vines here. Neckenmarkt was in the immediate vicinity of the Roman road that connected the towns of Scarbantia (Ödenburg) and Carnuntum. From the 15th century onwards, the "long-distance wine trade" was practised and wine was often exported to Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia in exchange for goods in kind. In 1620, the farmers of Neckenmarkt supported Nikolaus Count Esterházy (1583-1645) in his fight against rebellious Hungarians and Bohemians, which is the origin of the custom of flag-waving, after which a branded wine is named. An entry in the "Inventarium Vinorum" of 1639 documents that eight and a half buckets (433 litres) of "Außpruch"(outbreak) were harvested in Neckenmarkt in 1637.
The best quality vineyards with gravelly soil are located on the southern slopes of the Ödenburger Mountains. Well-known vineyards are Bodigraben, Grunderitsch, Himmelsthron, Hochberg, Kohlenberg, Rüsselsgrund, Sinter, Sonnensteig, Spiegelberg and Zinnersack. The red wine varieties Blaufränkisch, Zweigelt, Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Noir are predominantly cultivated. Well-known Neckenmarkt producers are Bayer Heribert, Draxler Andreas, Fuchs Christian, Hundsdorfer Anton, Lang Stefan, Scheiblhofer, Tesch Josef, Wellanschitz, Wieder Juliana, Winzerkeller Neckenmarkt and Wohlmuth Gerhard.
Picture top left: By Bwag - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0 at, Link
Picture top right: By Steindy - CC BY-SA 2.0 en, Link
Picture below: © ÖWM - Marcus Wiesner
For my many years of work as an editor with a wine and culinary focus, I always like to inform myself about special questions at Wine lexicon. Spontaneous reading and following links often leads to exciting discoveries in the wide world of wine.
Dr. Christa Hanten
Fachjournalistin, Lektorin und Verkosterin, Wien