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Wine bottle sizes: Magnum, methuselah, midas and more

A definitive guide to wine bottle sizes and their unique names.

Many of us have been lucky to share a magnum of wine, but what about a jeroboam? And do you know how many litres of wine a nebuchadnezzar holds? Or a filette? We have all the answers in our definitive guide to wine bottle sizes and their unique names – including where to find the world’s largest wine bottle.

When is a bottle not a bottle? When it’s a piccolo, jeroboam or balthazar.

And knowing the specific sizes of each – and their unique names – is not only fascinating from a historical perspective, but also comes in very handy in pub quizzes.

While we might call any wine in a glass vessel a bottle, a ‘bottle’, in fact, only refers to 750ml. Bordeaux’s wine council, the CIVB, said 750ml was only set as the standard measure in 1866.

It is said former British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill regularly drank two bottles of Champagne a day, although these were imperial pint-sized bottles, holding 568ml. These were available until 1973, when the UK joined the European Common Market.

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