Cavemen To Columbus
- Beer was probably a staple before bread. 1
- The world's oldest known recipe is for beer.
2
- Alcohol beverages have been produced for at
least 12,000 years. 3
- Our early ancestors probably began farming
not so much to grow food, which they could usually find easily,
as to insure a steady supply of ingredients needed to make alcohol
beverages. 4
- In ancient Egypt, "bread and beer" was a common
greeting. 5
- Early Egyptian writings urged mothers to send
their children to school with plenty of bread and beer for their
lunch. 6
- The Romans drank a wine containing seawater,
pitch, rosin, and turpentine. A Greek traveler asserted that it
required getting used to. 7
- A Chinese imperial edict of about 1,116 B.C.
asserted that the use of alcohol in moderation was required by
heaven. 8
- To the pre-Christian Anglo-Saxons, heaven
was not a place to play harps, but a place to visit with other
departed and enjoy alcohol beverages. 9
- The word "symposium" originally referred to
a gathering of men in ancient Greece for an evening of conversation
and drinking. 10
- Jesus drank alcohol (Matthew 15:11; Luke 7:33-35)
and approved of its moderate consumption (Matthew 15:11). 11
- St. Paul considered alcohol to be a creation
of God and inherently good (1 Timothy 4:4).
- The early Church declared that alcohol was
an inherently good gift of God to be used and enjoyed. While individuals
might choose not to drink, to despise alcohol was heresy. 12
- It was largely the monasteries that maintained
the knowledge and skills during the Middle Ages necessary to produce
quality alcohol beverages. 13
- Distillation was developed during the Middle
Ages, and the resulting alcohol was called aqua vitae or
"water of life." 14
- The adulteration of alcohol beverage was punishable
by death in medieval Scotland. 15
- Drinking liqueurs was required at all treaty
signings during the Middle Ages. 16