Coffee: A Dark HistoryFourth Estate, 2004 - 323 страници This is the tale of the wildfire spread of the consumption of a drink which is embedded in our history and our daily cultural life. The coffee industry worldwide employs more people - 30 million - than any other. It is the lifeblood of many third world countries, either earning them invaluable foreign currency or enslaving them to the monster that is modern global capitalism, depending on how you look at it. From obscure beginnings in East Africa a millennia ago and its early days as an aid to religious devotion, coffee became an integral part of the rise of European mercantilism from the 17th-century onwards. As well as being a valued trading commodity, it was the preferred beverage of the merchants who did the trading. The rise of the coffee house and the City of London were inextricably, perhaps even mysteriously linked. |
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Страница 99
... plantations were first successfully established in 1699 with cuttings from Dutch possessions at Malabar in India . These in turn may have originated in Yemen or Abyssinia . - - Once the Javanese coffee industry was established it very ...
... plantations were first successfully established in 1699 with cuttings from Dutch possessions at Malabar in India . These in turn may have originated in Yemen or Abyssinia . - - Once the Javanese coffee industry was established it very ...
Страница 158
... plantation , which is in sight of his house , and that he might even have prepared the coffee from Bamboo Hedge for ... plantations produced no income for Josephine as the island was , when she met Napoleon , in the hands of the British ...
... plantation , which is in sight of his house , and that he might even have prepared the coffee from Bamboo Hedge for ... plantations produced no income for Josephine as the island was , when she met Napoleon , in the hands of the British ...
Страница 174
... plantations , combined with the slave labour prohibited elsewhere , made Brazilian coffee unbeatably competitive ... plantation owners were . . often fabulously rich , and inclined to inflict 174 ANTONY WILD.
... plantations , combined with the slave labour prohibited elsewhere , made Brazilian coffee unbeatably competitive ... plantation owners were . . often fabulously rich , and inclined to inflict 174 ANTONY WILD.
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The Way We Live Now | 1 |
Origins | 17 |
Enter the Dragon | 34 |
Авторско право | |
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