
Yamazaki Whisky Glass
Winning bidders having this bottle delivered to a non-UK address will pay [%% bidValueIncCommission | convertToSelectedCurrency %%] ( [%% bidValueIncCommission | currency '£' %%] ) (Hammer Price + 12.5% buyers commission)
Shipping costs are not included in these examples. You can find more information here.
Winning bidders having this bottle delivered to a non-UK address will pay Hammer Price + 12.5% buyers commission
Shipping costs are not included in these examples. You can find more information here.
Bid history

Yamazaki Whisky Glass
Winning bidders having this bottle delivered to a non-UK address will pay [%% bidValueIncCommission | convertToSelectedCurrency %%] ( [%% bidValueIncCommission | currency '£' %%] ) (Hammer Price + 12.5% buyers commission)
Shipping costs are not included in these examples. You can find more information here. Winning bidders having this bottle delivered to a UK address will pay Hammer Price + 12.5% buyers commission + 20% VAT on the hammer price and buyers commission
Winning bidders having this bottle delivered to a non-UK address will pay Hammer Price + 12.5% buyers commission
Shipping costs are not included in these examples. You can find more information here.
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Description
A Yamazaki Whisky Glass
- Distillery: Yamazaki
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About the Distillery:
Yamazaki distillery is a Japanese whisky distillery located in Shimamoto, Osaka Prefecture, Japan. Opened in 1923, and owned by Suntory, it was Japan's first commercial whisky distillery. Seven thousand bottles of unblended malt whisky are on display in its Whisky Library.
The company founder and chairman of Kotobukiya wanted to produce a serious whisky and therefore hired Taketsuru Masataka, whom he appointed factory director of the Yamazaki distillery in 1924. This descendant of a sake brewing family from the 17th century was in Scotland in 1918. He traveled to study at Glasgow University and learned how to make Scotch whisky on site. He married a Scottish girl, Jessie Roberta Cowan, who went to Japan with him in 1920. Under Taketsuru the production of the first whisky was completed in 1929, which was sold as shirofuda. Due to differences with Torii, Taketsuru left the company in 1934 and founded the Daju-Nippon Kaju KK company , later called Nikka Whisky Distilling, in Hokkaidō in the same year.
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Terms & Conditions:
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