A History of the World in 6 Glasses

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Throughout human history, certain drinks have done much more than just quench thirst. As Tom Standage relates with authority and charm, six of them have had a surprisingly pervasive influence on the course of history, becoming the defining drink during a pivotal historical period.

A History of the World in 6 Glasses tells the story of humanity from the Stone Age to the 21st century through the lens of beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and cola. Beer was first made in the Fertile Crescent and by 3000 B.C.E. was so important to Mesopotamia and Egypt that it was used to pay wages. In ancient Greece wine became the main export of her vast seaborne trade, helping spread Greek culture abroad. Spirits such as brandy and rum fueled the Age of Exploration, fortifying seamen on long voyages and oiling the pernicious slave trade. Although coffee originated in the Arab world, it stoked revolutionary thought in Europe during the Age of Reason, when coffeehouses became centers of intellectual exchange. And hundreds of years after the Chinese began drinking tea, it became especially popular in Britain, with far-reaching effects on British foreign policy. Finally, though carbonated drinks were invented in 18th-century Europe they became a 20th-century phenomenon, and Coca-Cola in particular is the leading symbol of globalization.

For Tom Standage, each drink is a kind of technology, a catalyst for advancing culture by which he demonstrates the intricate interplay of different civilizations. You may never look at your favorite drink the same way again.

336 pages, Paperback

First published May 31,2005

About the author

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Tom Standage is a journalist and author from England. A graduate of Oxford University, he has worked as a science and technology writer for The Guardian, as the business editor at The Economist, has been published in Wired, The New York Times, and The Daily Telegraph, and has published five books, including The Victorian Internet[1][2]. This book explores the historical development of the telegraph and the social ramifications associated with this development. Tom Standage also proposes that if Victorians from the 1800s were to be around today, they would be far from impressed with present Internet capabilities. This is because the development of the telegraph essentially mirrored the development of the Internet. Both technologies can be seen to have largely impacted the speed and transmission of information and both were widely criticised by some, due to their perceived negative consequences.

Standage has taken part in various key media events. He recently participated in ictQATAR's "Media Connected" forum for journalists in Qatar, where he discussed the concept of technology journalism around the world and how technology is expected to keep transforming the world of journalism in the Middle East and all around the world.

-Wikipedia

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April 17,2025
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I seem to be in a phase where I like books that show me the hidden life of the everyday things all around us, especially food and drink. A few years ago I read "Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany", by Bill Buford, which started me on this quest, which was followed by several more books, including "The Omnivore's Dilemma", by Michael Pollan. Most recently I read "The Search for God and Guinness", by Stephen Mansfield.

Now, I've finished "A History of the World in 6 Glasses", by Tom Standage, which connects the span of human history to 6 different beverages that affected history culturally, politically, anthropologically, nutritionally, and economically. The six, in rough order of their era of greatest influence, are beer, wine, whiskey, coffee, tea, and cola. More broadly, you could have called the book "A History of the World in Two Brain-Altering Chemicals: Alcohol and Caffeine."

It is a fascinating look at how these drinks sometimes have been responsible for pivotal moments in history, causing one civilization to rise and another to fall. While human affairs are much more complicated than one factor can explain, we can't deny that one of the reasons ancient tribes turned from peripatetic hunting-gathering to more stationary agriculture was the need to cultivate grains for beer, for instance. (Standage points out that of course the grains were also used for bread too, but bread and beer were nearly interchangeable in most places, two phases of cooking of the same product. Beer was "liquid bread" and bread was "solid beer.")

Most the drinks had origins--or at least early primary uses--in religious rituals, especially beer, wine, coffee, and tea. Whiskey and cola, which were much more modern inventions were just consumer products. Eventually, all of them made the leap to common use. What made them significant was their eventual ubiquity, even if at first they were reserved to the elites.

There were also some very interesting anecdotes, such as the story of how coffee came to Europe from the Middle East. Some theologians rejected it as a Muslim invention, thus of the devil, while others embraced. So a decision had to be made.

Shortly before his death in 1605, Pope Clement VIII was asked to state the Catholic church's position on coffee. At the time, the drink was a novelty little known in Europe except among botanists and medical men, including those at the University of Padua, a leading center for medical research. Coffee's religious opponents argued that coffee was evil: They contended that since Muslims were unable to drink wine, the holy drink of Christians, the devil had punished them with coffee instead. But the pope had the final say. A Venetian merchant provided a small sample for inspection, and Clement decided to taste the new drink before making his decision. The story goes that he was so enchanted by its taste and aroma that he approved its consumption by Christians.


Other sources claim he said: "This devil's drink is so delicious...we should cheat the devil by baptizing it." True or not, I will be sure to thank Pope Clement VIII and pray for him every day over my morning cup of joe.

Another interesting tidbit concerned the importance of tea to the Industrial Revolution in Britain in the 18th and 19th century. As labor became less about individual craftsmen and more about unskilled workers who could maintain machines in monotonous repitition over long hours, tea and tea breaks helped them to remain alert and concentrate. Likewise, even as the factory workers were gathering together in closer working and living conditions, waterborne illnesses became almost extinct, not just due to the boiling of water for tea, but for the phenolic acids--the tannins--in the tea itself.

Infants benefited too, since the antibacterial phenolics in tea pass easily into the breast milk of nursing mothers. This lowered infant mortality and provided a large labor pool just as the Industrial Revolution took hold.


In fact, every one of the six drinks was considered for both their positive and negative effects on society. Coffee led to 16th-century coffeehouses that were the locus of the Scientific Revolution that led to the Enlightenment, democracy, free-market economics, and more. The Chinese stranglehold on tea production and insistence on Westerners buying it with silver, not trading it for Western goods, led to the creation of the opium trade from India that eventually destabilized China in the 19th century, which last through the 20th century until the rise of Communism.

While these six beverages can't be said to have caused the most important and decisive moments of history, they often played significant roles in moments that caused the course of history to go in one direction and not the other. If not for the wine it exported, would Greece have risen to a great culture that brought us philosophy and so much else?Without tea or rum/whiskey, would Great Britain have become the empire on whose flag the sun never sets? Maybe, maybe in a different form or in a different time, but undoubtedly different.

"A History of the World in Six Glasses" was a fun and quick read that makes me want to delve more into the various individual elements it presents. Which is the best kind of book, isn't it?
April 17,2025
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کتاب جالبی بود. یکی دیگه از پیشنهادهای پادکست بی پلاس. اینکه مثلا بدونی چای چه تاثیر مهمی در استقلال آمریکایی داشته که الان در تمام دنیا تاثبرگذاره تامل برانگیزه.
ولی مشکلش به نظرم این بود که شاید اگه اینطوری به هر چیز کوچیکی نگاه کنیم به یه همچین نتایجی برسیم.
بعضی جاها نویسنده سعی کرده بود برای بهتر جلوه دادن منظورش و مهمتر جلوه دادن نقش مواردی که بررسی کرده بود، یه سری بزرگنمایی بی مورد داشته باشه.
3/5
April 17,2025
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Really good read! One of these books you would classify as social history non-fiction. The author takes a premise that there are 6 leading drinks (glasses) that influenced the world. Each drink has its own historical era and each drink in one way or another was such a popular drink that it was a force behind change. The drinks: Beer, Wine, Distilled Spirits, Coffee, Tea and Coca Cola. Many interesting stories from each glass - with each drink being given its own section in the book so there is no overlap. If you enjoy this type of non-fiction book than this is one that you should put on your list to read. Short book, short and snappy sections. Read it in 6 days: One day per glass!
April 17,2025
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این کتاب دیدگاهی متفاوتی از تاریخ داره که ذهنیت شما رو به سمت جنگ نمیبرده بر خلاف سایر کتاب های تاریخی
و‌نقطه ضعف کتاب هم بیش از اندازه پرداختن به امریکا و اروپا هستش
April 17,2025
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Had to read this book for school so I obviously didn’t enjoy it
April 17,2025
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A well-written book is sure to quench the thirst of a curious reader, full of facts or action that keeps them coming back for more. But, how did people throughout history quench their literal thirst and how do the beverage choices made throughout history help define the advancements the world has seen since its inception? Tom Standage seeks to answer these and many other questions as he examines how six beverages (beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and Coca-Cola) help to explain global advancements since humans first inhabited the earth. Standage takes readers as far back as possible to explore how beer could have influenced history so completely. A combination of water and cereal grains, beer was an accidental discovery that exemplifies the sedentary nature of humans. Crops took time to grow and required people to stay in one place for a period of time. The fermentation process also took a period to develop, which required people not to roam freely across the land. Beer could be made and consumed by anyone, which differed greatly from wine. More of a high-class beverage, wine was much more complex to make and costly to consume. As Standage explains, it was developed by the Romans and Athenians, who modified it and created lavish drinking parties around its consumption. Standage also argues that wine helped propel Christianity around the world, as the beverage is at the heart of the religion’s central symbolic theme of the Blood of Christ. Moving from simple fermentation to a more complex system called distillation, spirits came onto the scene and served to propel the world ahead even more. With use of scientific brewing and the addition of sugar to help the naturally impeded yeasts found in fruits or grains, spirits were a more complex and fiery beverage. The need for sugars helped to foster its cultivation, which was back-breaking work. What better way to have sugar harvested than through the use of slaves, which Standage explains helped bring spirits to the New World. Caribbean sugar cane was cultivated by African slaves, creating a tumultuous time in history to facilitate the creation of many new and interesting beverages. An equally popular drink in the form of coffee emerged, which created an enlightenment of sorts. Coffee became the drink of academics and the intellectual, as they would gather to discuss their ideas at coffee houses well in the night. The fostering of discussions, much as wine had done for the Romans and Athenians, came from coffee and, to this day, the correlation between the beverage and higher understanding is accepted. Tea, on the other hand, proved not only to be a drink that brought about medicinal properties, but helped Britain cement its power in the world. While the British Empire gained in importance, the British East India Company developed a worldwide supply of tea and marketed it as best as possible. This power remained strong for centuries, as the British remained at its centre. However, all good things must be replaced with something else, leaving Coca-Cola to move from a pharmaceutical remedy to the drink of America in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its production skyrocketed and was soon symbolic of America, which developed into freedom before long. American troops all over the world sought the beverage and wherever the US military found itself, freedom was said to be as well. Standage talks at length about the Soviet push-back against Coca-Cola, though the Iron Curtain was no match for the power of the mighty soda pop. In a book that leaves the reader’s head spinning as they reach for their beverage of choice, one can only wonder what the next big drink will be, and how its impact will shape the future. Standage posits his guess in the epilogue, but you’ll have to read to find out. Recommended to those who love history told through a unique lens, as well as the reader who loves to learn as they are entertained.

I quite enjoy looking at history and world events through unorthodox means, particularly when I had not thought to do so myself. Tom Standage does a masterful job at creating this perspective and fills this book with a great deal of information that can be interpreted in many ways. While I only skimmed the surface of his discussions in the paragraph above, the fact that six mere beverages can truly tell so much about how humans have evolved over time is amazing. Standage uses concrete examples to substantiate his arguments and keeps the discussion interesting at all turns. He has little concern about offending, as he speaks openly and frankly at every turn. His attention to detail is like few other books I have read in the past and the fact that topics flow so easily makes the book even more interesting. With twelve strong chapters (two on each beverage), Standage explores the history of the beverage and then discusses its social, political, and economic impact on the world. This permits the reader to better understand his arguments and almost demands taking a step back to see how the pieces all come together. I am pleasantly surprised about how ensconced I was with the arguments presented and can only hope that his other works on the subject of world history are just as captivating. Now then, I need a Guinness to synthesise some of what I read... or maybe a dark roast coffee.... no, a strong tea! Well, while I decide, go find this book and see what you think for yourself.

Kudos, Mr. Standage, for an amazing read. I can only hope other adventurous readers take the time and enjoy this as much as I have.

Love/hate the review? An ever-growing collection of others appears at:
http://pecheyponderings.wordpress.com/

A Book for All Seasons, a different sort of Book Challenge: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/...
April 17,2025
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This book should really be called "A History of the Western World in 6 Glasses," as it doesn't consider the drinks of South America, Sub-Saharan Africa, Oceania, and much of Asia. Indeed, tea is considered only through the lens of the British empire, even though the formal Japanese tea service is arguably more interesting than a British tea party. Even as a Western history, it kind of fails, as there's a large gap between wine production in the Roman empire and the distillation of rum in Barbados. This can only be viewed as a surface history of the world, but as far as surface stories go, it's pretty interesting.

Throughout the book, Standage tells the history of six beverages (beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and Coca-Cola) as they appeared in the historical record. This is actually not so great, as the book ends up talking about beer without ever mentioning Germany, and wine without ever mentioning France or California. Instead of bringing it all back together in the epilogue, he just rambles on about bottled water and (randomly) colonizing Mars.

The book also contains a shockingly uncritical depiction of the Coca-Cola company, which creatives a "beverage" that can best be described as a noxious substance that no one should be consuming, especially not on a regular basis. Unfortunately, the health effects of soda are not discussed.

I'd recommend A History of the World in 6 Glasses only to those interested in culinary history and esoterica. History buffs and general readers should skip this one.
April 17,2025
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توی این کتاب، تاریخ از دیدگاه جدیدی به شش قسمت تقسیم شده: بر اساس نوشیدنی‌ها! تاریخ در شش برهه‌ی زمان که هریک از این نوشیدنی‌ها رایج بودند، تقسیم و بررسی می‌شه:
آبجو، شراب، مشروبات الکلی، قهوه، چای، کوکاکولا

اولش برام عجیب بود چون نقش نوشیدنی رو در وقایع تاریخی و زندگی و پیشرفت و تمدن‌ها زیادی برجسته کرده بود
و مطالب تکراری هم زیاد داشت
اما به مرور جالب‌تر شد و اطلاعات جالب‌توجهی فهمیدم
گرچه بیشتر روی تاریخ غرب تمرکز کرده بود و منابعش هم گاهی مبهم بودند

بریده‌هایی از کتاب رو می‌نویسم

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تصویرنگاشت‌های سومریان در حدود سه هزار سال پیش از میلاد به طور معمول دو نفر را نشان می‌دهد که از خمره‌ای بزرگ با نی آبجو می‌نوشند.... با وجود آن‌که استفاده از نی دیگر ضرورتی نداشت. شاید تنها توضیح درباره ادامه چنین سنتی این است که می‌شد نوشیدنی‌ها را، برخلاف غذا، به معنای واقعی کلمه با دیگری شریک شد. وقتی چند نفریک خمره آبجو را شریک می‌شوند، همگی یک مایع يكسان را می‌نوشند: در نقطه مقابل وقتی یک تکه گوشت به چند قسمت تقسیم می‌شود، به طور معمول بعضی از آنها خوش‌خوراک‌تر از بقیه هستند. در واقع سهیم شدن در یک نوشیدنی، نمادی جهان شمول از مهمان‌نوازی و دوستی محسوب می‌شود. چنین عملی نشانگر قابل اعتماد بودن شخصی است که نوشیدنی را پیشکش می‌کند، زیرا حاکی از آن است که نوشیدنی سمی یا فاسد نیست.
زمانی که هنوز خبری از جام‌های تک‌نفره نبود و آبجوهای اولیه در خمره‌های بدوی به عمل می‌آمدند نیز این سنت سهیم شدن وجود داشت. گرچه دیگر مرسوم نیست که برای نوشیدن از یک خمره اشتراکی آبجو، یک نی در اختیار مهمان خود قرار دهیم، اما هنوز هم چای را از درون یک قوری داخل فنجان می‌ریزیم یا شراب را از یک بطری مشترک به جام‌ها سرازیر می‌کنیم. وقتی هم در جمع چیزی می‌نوشیم، با زدن جام‌ها به یکدیگر، به شکل نمادین تک تک آن‌ها را به یک ظرف بزرگ و مشترک از همان نوشیدنی مبدل می‌سازیم. این سنت‌ها، ریشه‌هایی بس کهن دارند.

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عمل بالا بردن جام نوشیدنی، در واقع بازتابی مدرن از تصوری باستانی است: الكل واجد قدرتی است که نیروهای ماورایی را فرامی‌خواند.

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وقتی یک برده سیاهپوست از لیگون درخواست کرد مسیحی‌اش کند، او دوباره پای همان منطقی را به میان آورد که همیشه برای توجيه برده‌داری از آن استفاده می شد: «چنین تقاضایی دارد، چرا که تصور می‌کند با مسیحی شدن از تمامی معارفی که در طلبش است بهره‌مند خواهد شد». ��ا این حال تقاضای برده را به گوش صاحبش رساند و پاسخ هم به طور طبیعی منفی بود، زیرا «براساس قانون انگلستان... نمی توانیم یک مسیحی را به بردگی بگیریم»
{منطقش رو دیدید؟ نمی‌تونیم آزادت کنیم چون این‌طوری نمی‌تونیم به بردگی بگیریمت!
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