A quick tour of the green fairy’s history

March 25th, 2011

With the rediscovery of the great cocktails and recipes that use absinthe, people are once again finding  the exciting (and delicious!) ways Hapsburg can be used. Absinthe has always been seen as an alternative, naughty drink, and at Hapsburg we’re not going to argue with that! Our upcoming House of Hapsburg events are going to be full of otherworldly glamour and fantasy.

Over the course of history, these qualities have proved too much for some. In Switzerland, the drink’s country of origin, it was banned for 96 years.  They even had a referendum on the issue, which produced some fabulous propaganda posters , but resulted in the century long ban.

In February 1915 the French government spent 14,800,000 francs to bar owners to purchase stocks of absinthe and reimburse the dealers. The New York Times reported that the then French Minister of the Interior at the time claimed that a ban should be brought in “in the interests of the public”…

nytimesabsinthefeb1915_1

…and yet the French military were issued with a daily does in the tropics as an antidote to Malaria. Quite what it did for the soliders’ aim is questionable!

Absinthe only became legal in the US in 2007, but to many people’s surprise has never been banned in the UK.

Read more on the origins of absinthe on the Wine and Spirit international website.

One Response to A quick tour of the green fairy’s history

  1. Pingback: Blog - Hapsburg Absinthe

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