Wineries

Cantine San Marzano – Puglia's Primitivo Co-operative and Home of Sessantanni

Robert KozinskiBy Robert Kozinski
July 18, 2026
san marzanoapulienprimitivo

Cantine San Marzano in Puglia: a growers' co-operative for Primitivo and Negroamaro, famed for its Sessantanni Primitivo di Manduria. History, style and fact file.

The Essentials

  • 1One of Puglia's best-known growers' co-operatives – founded in 1962 by 19 winemakers in San Marzano di San Giuseppe.
  • 2Today around 1,200 member growers and roughly 1,500 hectares of vines, often in small family plots.
  • 3The lead grapes are Primitivo and Negroamaro – the classic red varieties of the Salento.
  • 4The flagship is Sessantanni Primitivo di Manduria DOP, from bush vines (Alberello) over 60 years old.
  • 5Named 'Co-operative of the Year' by Gambero Rosso in 2020; repeatedly awarded Tre Bicchieri.

Key Facts

Region
Puglia – San Marzano di San Giuseppe, province of Taranto, Italy
Founded
1962 by 19 winemakers
Owner / Winemaker
Growers' co-operative (Cantine San Marzano)
Vineyard area
around 1,500 hectares across roughly 1,200 member growers
Main grape varieties
Primitivo, Negroamaro
Wine styles
Powerful, oak-aged reds as well as approachable, fruit-forward wines
Classification
Primitivo di Manduria DOP; IGP Salento and Puglia
Signature
Sessantanni from bush vines (Alberello) over 60 years old

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Summary

Cantine San Marzano is one of the best-known growers' co-operatives in Puglia and a symbol of how Primitivo rose to become an internationally sought-after red wine. Founded in 1962 by 19 winemakers in the village of San Marzano di San Giuseppe in the province of Taranto, the co-operative today unites around 1,200 member growers farming roughly 1,500 hectares – many of them small family plots worked for generations. Its reputation rests on Primitivo and Negroamaro, the classic red varieties of the Salento. Above all, it is world-famous for the Sessantanni Primitivo di Manduria DOP, made from bush vines over 60 years old. San Marzano shows that co-operative winegrowing and top international quality need not be a contradiction.

History

Winegrowing around San Marzano goes back many centuries; the region's families have tended their vines for generations. The decisive step towards today's co-operative came in 1962, when 19 winemakers from San Marzano di San Giuseppe joined forces to pool their resources, vinify together and give the region's farming tradition an economic backbone.

For decades the co-operative supplied mainly bulk wine. The turning point came in the mid-1990s: in 1996 its own bottling line was installed, and San Marzano began to focus consistently on its own brand and bottled wines. A classic bulk producer thus became one of the most ambitious estates in southern Italy. A milestone was the 2000 vintage, which brought Sessantanni to market as the co-operative's first great own wine. Today the co-operative counts around 1,200 members and produces many millions of bottles a year, exported to numerous countries.

Location & Terroir

San Marzano lies deep in the Salento, the "heel" of the Italian boot, just a few kilometres inland from the Gulf of Taranto. The climate is thoroughly Mediterranean: plenty of sun, warmth and dryness, tempered by the proximity of two seas. These conditions yield fully ripe grapes with dense fruit and soft tannins – the basis for the warm, generous style of Puglian reds.

Decisive are the soils: iron-rich red earth (terra rossa) over a limestone subsoil. They store heat and moisture and are considered ideal for Primitivo and Negroamaro. Many of the best plots are old vines trained in the traditional bush system (Alberello), which give low yields and are tended entirely by hand.

Style & Philosophy

The co-operative's philosophy combines farming tradition with modern cellar technology. At its heart is the work of many small member operations, whose grapes – often from old vines – are vinified centrally. The top wines are aged in French and American oak, which lends them structure, spice and ageing potential without masking the typical Puglian richness.

Stylistically, San Marzano's wines stand for powerful, warm reds: dark fruit, soft tannins, often a hint of sweetness and moderate acidity. Primitivo in particular embodies this approachable, immediately appealing character. Negroamaro is a touch more austere and structured. Alongside the great wines, the co-operative deliberately values attractively priced bottles that open up the Salento style to a broad audience.

Notable Wines

Since a co-operative has no single estate vineyards of its own, San Marzano defines itself through its wine ranges. The best known are:

  • Sessantanni Primitivo di Manduria DOP – the flagship from bush vines over 60 years old, aged around twelve months in barrique
  • Talò – a range of Primitivo and Negroamaro that makes the classic Salento style approachable
  • F (Negroamaro Salento IGP) – a highly decorated, modern Negroamaro
  • Vindoro and further Primitivo and Negroamaro wines for everyday enjoyment

Sessantanni remains the reference wine: it comes from the old vines around the "Valle del Sessantanni" and stands as a symbol for the rescue and revaluation of old bush vines.

Awards

San Marzano is one of the most frequently awarded producers in southern Italy. In 2020 the influential Italian wine guide Gambero Rosso named Cantine San Marzano "Co-operative of the Year." Its Negroamaro F has been awarded the coveted Tre Bicchieri across several vintages, and Sessantanni too regularly earns top marks in national and international tastings. In this way the co-operative has done much to raise the standing of Puglian reds – and of Primitivo in particular – on world markets.

Frequently asked questions

What is Cantine San Marzano known for?

Cantine San Marzano is a large Puglian growers' co-operative and one of the driving forces behind Primitivo's international success. It is best known for Sessantanni Primitivo di Manduria DOP – a powerful, oak-aged red from bush vines more than 60 years old. The name also stands for Negroamaro and for approachable, fruit-forward reds from the Salento.

Where is Cantine San Marzano located?

The co-operative is based in San Marzano di San Giuseppe in the province of Taranto in Puglia, at the heart of the Primitivo di Manduria growing area. The vineyards lie not far from the Gulf of Taranto on iron-rich red soils over a limestone subsoil.

What does 'Sessantanni' mean?

Sessantanni is Italian for 'sixty years' and refers to the age of the vines: the wine is made from Primitivo bush vines that are 60 years old and older. Launched with the 2000 vintage, it was the co-operative's first great own-label wine and remains its flagship today.

Is San Marzano a co-operative or a family estate?

San Marzano is explicitly not a single estate but a growers' co-operative (cantina sociale). It was founded in 1962 by 19 winemakers and today unites around 1,200 members, who pool grapes – often from just a few hectares per family – to be vinified and marketed together.

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