Alcohol has been with people since antiquity. He can say without hesitation that alcohol drinks have had a significant impact on various events in the history of the world - on all continents!

Although the purpose of drinking alcohol is largely unchanged, various circumstances related to drinking alcoholic beverages have been going on throughout the history of mankind. Some of them can amaze you!

Are you ready for a few historical curiosities about alcohol that will be a real surprise for you?

In Mesopotamia, beer became women!

Although in Mesopotamia the beer was mainly consumed by men who went to Sumerian taverns, only women were involved in running these establishments! They also actively participated in the brewing process, although it was often done under the watchful eye of experienced brewers. Detailed aspects of the "girl's beer business" were regulated by the famous Hammurabi Code. You had to be careful about running a business - for charging a client too much money for a golden drink, a woman was punished by throwing her into the water.

Egyptian debauchery in honor of the goddess

Quite an interesting holiday was celebrated in ancient Egypt in honor of the goddess Hator. According to legend, at the request of the god Re, it was supposed to wipe out humanity. Re changed her mind, but the goddess liked the murder of defenseless people, and she refused to stop. Then the god Re poured red tinted beer on the Egyptian fields. Hator, thinking it was human blood, began to drink it. There was so much of him that she "grew up" solidly.

The Egyptians held a huge libation in honor of this event. The wine was drunk to the extreme, to "pour into the corpse", and all this was accompanied by one great orgy in the temple corridors - people drunk to the limit of possible mating with everyone, encouraged by not less drunk priests. Admittedly, not a bad party.

And what about children who were born after such a "melange"? Being conceived on the feast day of the goddess Hator was an honor and opened the way for the gentleman to a respected spiritual state in society!

Wine not for women

In Ancient Rome, women were not so easy anymore. They were forbidden by law to eat wine. There was even a risk of death for breaking the ban! The punishment could be imposed by a husband who caught his wife drunk. He did not have to kill her right away, but such events often ended in a solid beating of the "dissolute" woman.

State of intoxication by a mitigating circumstance

The men in Ancient Rome were better off. They could drink whatever they wanted. And do all sorts of stupid things without suffering normal consequences, because the state of intoxication was considered to be "acting out of affect" and a certain "justification" for an unlawful act. Interestingly, the same offenses committed while sober were punished very severely (even with death, where in the event of a "state of intoxication" one could receive something like a reprimand).

"Drunk like four hundred rabbits" or libation in Aztec

They had their drinking habits in South America too and antics! Although the consumption of alcohol was allowed only for the elderly, the inventive Aztecs had in their pantheon of deities, for example Patecatla - the god of fermentation or the goddess Mayahuel with four hundred breasts, who patronized the agave. This plant was used to make alcoholic beverages. From the union of these deities 400 rabbits were born, each symbolizing a particular state of alcohol intoxication. To this day, in South America, the term "has his rabbit" refers to the mood after drinking alcohol.

To the funeral, which means there will be a party

The ancient Chinese were very careful (or rather trying to keep) that drunkenness did not spread among the nation. As a result, various legal conditions for the consumption of the percentage of alcoholic beverages came into force. One of them allowed for free drinking only during a ceremony or ritual. These included funerals, so what some "ancient partygoers" would go from funeral to funeral, shedding tears of despair for the dead and drowning their sorrows in alcohol.

"I will quit politics, I will speed whiskey"

We don't know if US President George Washington said so, but he certainly did. After ending his political career, he changed into a distiller, opening a whiskey factory on his ranch. Soon it turned into one of the largest distilleries in the USA, producing 11 thousand. liters of whiskey per year. Washington also dealt with the prohibition introduced soon and supported pharmacy at the same time - his whiskey was the only alcohol allowed in the country. You could get them on prescription in a pharmacy. As you can probably guess, many sick people came to buy this miraculous medicine.

 

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