Saturday, January 09, 2010

BUT THIS IS NOTHING NEW








James Nicholls, writing in History Today, reminds us…

"In Britain, concerns over drunkenness go back a long way. The first Licensing Act, passed in 1552, required alehouse-keepers to acquire a license from local justices on the grounds that 'intolerable hurts and troubles' arose from drunkenness in 'common alehouses'. The following year rules were introduced strictly limiting the number of wine taverns that could open in any one town. This legislative distinction between common alehouses and more exclusive wine taverns reflected a long-standing social stratification of drinks in Britain. Lack of native viticulture made imported wine an elite drink, while ale, and later beer (made with hops, which were only widely used from the 15th century), were associated with more popular drinking cultures. Until the late 17th century the social stratification of alcohol tended to be expressed in relation to courtly wine, urban beer and bucolic ale. The liberalization of the gin trade following the accession of William III [in the early 18th century] threw an entirely new substance into this mix. Partly designed to promote a domestic alternative to French brandy, deregulation contributed to a staggering rise in consumption and triggered impassioned debates on the role of the state in regulating this new and dangerous commodity. In 1736 it also produced a disastrous attempt at gin prohibition, which was repealed seven years later."

2 comments:

Ben Coleman said...

The Gin Panic launched the first 'Drug War' in Western culture. And it was just as counter-productive as all of the current ones, forcing the production and distribution channels underground, where unregulated illegal vendors targetted all manner of vulnerable groups.
This book on it was rather excellent: "The Much-lamented Death of Madam Geneva: The Eighteenth-century Gin Craze"
I was back in London in October, and found the pubs beyond capacity. Of course, it's only to wash down the Cocaine (an estimated 2kg - 80,000 lines - of the drug run into the Thames each day, circa 2005).

slinkymalinky said...

There's a great book called An Inebriated History of Britain which talks about this very issue and about how our reputation for drunkenness has been about for centuries - to the extent that during the Napoleonic Wars, the French tried to delay the British troops by leaving stashes of alcohol in their path.