"Java Kings!" Who Ruled The Coffee World?
Coffee was discovered in Ethiopia by a goat herder named Kaldi
who while watching his goats noticed that they were acting very
bizarre. As he investigated this peculiar behavior he noticed
that the goats were dancing from one bush to the next eating
cherry colored berries. He started partaking of the berries
himself and was soon dancing with his goats. It became an aid
for him and fellow goat herders to help them stay alert through
out the night as they watched their herd.
Coffee moved north to the Arabia's where it flourished and
transcended from raw (green beans) to roasted beans that were
grounded and brewed. To gain control over this magical crop
Arabians would boil their export beans making them infertile.
For almost 600 years from about 1000 A.D. to the 1600's coffee
only grew in North Africa the Eastern Mediterranean, and India.
This crop was dominated by the nation of Islam for literally
centuries. It was when a smuggler named Baba Budan finally
opened the coffee market by smuggling live coffee seeds into
Europe. This made the coffee empire shift hands in 1615 A.D.
The Turks were at this time known for having a magical drink of
black color. A few of their merchants introduced the drink to
the Italians. The merchants of Venice introduced coffee to the
rest of Europe. In 1616 the Dutch did what was thought to be
impossible. They grew what is known as the first coffee plant in
Europe. In 1696 they started the first European owned coffee
empire in an area called Java, which is now part of Indonesia.
The Dutch soon after their Java conquest moved forward to other
areas. Amsterdam, was now growing coffee? This seems to be the
case. The Dutch were very prosperous in their coffee conquest.
It was in 1714 that King Louis the XIV received his first coffee
tree for his royal courtyard the Jard des Plantes. A few years
later while on a French expedition to the Caribbean's a Naval
Officer petitioned the king for some of the seed from the Jard
des Plantes, but his request was denied. Several days later the
Naval Officer and a few of his shipmates raided the Jard des
Plantes and took a shrub, which later yielded 18 million coffee
trees in a fifty-year period.
In 1727 Brazil wanted to have a piece of the coffee empire, but
had to find a way to smuggle some seeds from a coffee country.
Colonel Palheta was sent to settle a border dispute in France.
This smooth talking Officer found the coffee fortress
impregnable, so he found a road of lease resistance. That road
was none other then the Governor's wife. His plan paid off. At a
fair well dinner she presented him with a bush with seedlings.
>From these seed sprang forth the largest coffee empire ever. By
the 1800's Brazil's coffee was no longer a drink for the elite.
Everyone was able to partake from this magical drink.
How fortunate we are today that coffee has been made accessible
to the Millions who love it. Our history lesson has taught us
that coffee was meant to be share the world around. No King can
rule the coffee empire!