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Incremental Bidding Explained
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Bottle Details
Royal Brackla 16 Year Old John Bissett Full Proof / Zenith Import
Founded in 1817, Brackla distillery was the first in Scotland to be granted a Royal Warrant, becoming Royal Brackla at the behest of King William IV in 1835. The distillery was primarily tasked with providing malt for blending, and became part of DCL (now Diageo) in 1943. It was one of the many distilleries that they were forced to close due to a production surplus in the 1980s however, mothballed between 1985 and 1991. Royal Brackla was sold along with the rest of those associated with the Dewar's brand to Bacardi in 1998. It was bottled by United Distillers as part of the Flora & Fauna range, within the Rare Malts Selection, but it was not until 1999 under Bacardi ownership it first would first appear under its own unique single malt brand. Even then, distribution was limited until it was eventually relaunched in 2014 as part of company’s Last Great Malts collection, alongside Aberfeldy, Aultmore and The Deveron.
Prior to the formation of United Distillers in 1988, the distilleries within the DCL portfolio were often licensed out to its blending companies, in this instance it was John Bisset & Co. When United Distillers succeeded DCL, one of their first orders of business was to reclaim control of the distribution of their single malts. Royal Brackla single malt would not be bottled again until 1991 when a 12 year old was introduced as part of the Flora & Fauna brand.
This is a particularly rare release, produced exclusively for the renowned Italian importer, G.P. Bonfanti and his Zenith Italia firm. Both this 12 year old and a full proof 16 year old were bottled for them and are the only Royal Brackla single malts produced by John Bisset & Co, both released after the distillery's closure in 1980s.
One of 3,600 bottles.
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