One of the world's oldest Champagne makers has just struck liquid gold.
Pol Roger, the French Champagne house whose wine was famous for being Sir Winston Churchill's favourite tipple, has unearthed a treasure trove of bottles lost in the ruins of collapsed cellars for more than a century.
Experts say the 26 bottles so far recovered could still be drinkable, and that there may well be many more from the million or so lost at the time.
The fate of the bottles has been the stuff of "dreams and nightmares for generations of the family and cellar masters", Laurent d'Harcourt, Pol Roger's chief executive, said.
The story began on February 23, 1900, when two floors of cellars collapsed overnight. Le Vigneron Champenois, the local trade paper, reported at the time that at 2am "a dull rumble similar to the sound of thunder" awoke Maurice Roger, who had taken over the house with his brother Georges from their father Pol in 1899.