Ancient Alcohol -
Beer was probably a staple before bread. -
The world's oldest known recipe is for beer. -
Alcohol beverages have been produced for at least 12,000 years. -
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. -
In ancient Egypt, "bread and beer" was a common greeting. -
Early Egyptian writings urged mothers to send their children to school with plenty of bread and beer for their lunch. -
The Romans drank a wine containing seawater, pitch, rosin, and turpentine. A Greek traveler asserted that it required getting used to. -
A Chinese imperial edict of about 1,116 B.C. asserted that the use of alcohol in moderation was required by heaven. -
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. -
The word "symposium" originally referred to a gathering of men in ancient Greece for an evening of conversation and drinking. -
Jesus drank alcohol (Matthew 15:11; Luke 7:33-35) and approved of its moderate consumption (Matthew 15:11). -
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. -
It was largely the monasteries that maintained the knowledge and skills during the Middle Ages necessary to produce quality alcohol beverages. -
Distillation was developed during the Middle Ages, and the resulting alcohol was called aqua vitae or "water of life." -
The adulteration of alcohol beverage was punishable by death in medieval Scotland. -
Drinking liqueurs was required at all treaty signings during the Middle Ages.
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