History of Coffee: Part II - Spread of Coffee to Europe
It was not until 1615, that Europe was formally introduced to
coffee. Venetian traders, who had strong trade links with the
Levant (historical term referring to a large area of the Middle
East incorporating the countries of: Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and
Syria), started to import coffee into Italy. Once in Europe, the
consumption of coffee soon spread. However, the introduction of
coffee into Europe was not without its controversy. According to
many accounts, a group of Christian clerics tried to have coffee
banned before it had become widely available. They came to Pope
Clement VIII (1535-1605), claiming that coffee was for Satan's
followers, and that Christians who drank it might lose their
souls to the Devil. But before Pope Clement would ban coffee he
insisted on tasting it. After drinking his first cup, the Pope
was so impressed with the flavour, that he reasoned that such a
drink could not possibly be the work of Satan and instead
declared that coffee should be baptized to make it a true
Christian drink.
The first person recorded in history to brew coffee in England
was an international student named Nathaniel Conopios from
Crete, who was studying at Balliol College, Oxford. This simple
act, which happened in May 1637, was recorded by both; scholar
John Evelyn and historian Anthony Wood. Although, shortly
afterwards Conopios was expelled from college, his influence had
a lasting effect on Oxford, as it was in Oxford that the first
English coffeehouse was opened in 1650 by Jacob, a Lebanese Jew.
Even though Jacob moved to London a few years later to repeat
his success, he had begun a trend that saw many more
coffeehouses open in Oxford during that decade.
The most significant of these coffeehouses, was the one open by
Arthur Tillyard in 1655. Tillyard's coffeehouse became a meeting
point for a group who were known as the Oxford Coffee Club. This
group was made up of Oxford's leading scientists, including Sir
Robert Boyle, and their students, who would meet to discuss
their theories and research and share ideas. It is from the
Oxford Coffee Club which the world famous Royal Society, one of
the leading scientific societies in the world, evolved from.
The first coffeehouse in London was opened in 1652 by an
Armenian man named Pasqua Ros