Absinthe
Timeline
Middle Ages | Wormwood drink used as a cure for flatulence. 1 | |
1731 | G. Smith publishes a recipe for proof-spirits infused with wormwood and sweetened with sugar in his Complete Body of Distilling. 2 | |
1792 | Dr. Pierre Ordinaire writes a recipe for absinthe, and becomes one of the first to promote the virtues of the wormwood drink. | |
1797 | Henri-Louis Pernod opens his first absinthe distillery in Switzerland. | |
1805 | Henri-Louis Pernod opens larger absinthe distillery in Pontarlier, France. | |
1840s | French soldiers fighting in Algeria in the 1840s drank absinthe as a preventative against malaria and other diseases. This sparked the first big surge in absinthe's popularity in France. 3 | |
1844 | Paul Marie Verlaine is born. [More Info] | |
1850 | Henri-Louis Pernod dies. | |
1859 | Manet paints The Absinthe Drinker. | |
1859 | Baudelaire meets Manet. | |
Nov 1871 | Verlaine and Rimbaud form relationship. Become inseperable for many years. | |
1876 | Degas paints L'Absinthe [More Info] | |
1878 | 8 million liters of Absinthe imported in the United States. | |
1887 | Van Gogh paints "Still Life with Absinthe". [More Info] | |
1891 | Rimbaud dies in France. | |
1895 | Maignan paints "The Green Muse". [More Info] | |
1901 | Picasso paints The Absinthe Drinker, oil on canvas, and Woman Drinking Absinthe, oil on canvas. | |
Aug 11, 1901 | Pernod plant in Pontarlier catches fire when struck by lightning. The fire burns for four days. | |
1905 | Absinthe banned in Belgium. | |
Aug 28, 1905 | Jean Lanfray murders his wife while supposedly drunk on many liquors, including and especially absinthe. | |
May 15, 1906 | Vaud legislature in Switzerland votes to ban absinthe | |
Feb 2, 1907 | Grand Conseil of Switzerland votes to ban the retail sale of absinthe and its imitations. | |
Jul 5, 1908 | Absinthe oficially banned in Switzerland (Article 32 of federal constitution). | |
1910 | French production of Absinthe reaches 36 million liters anually. 4 | |
1911 | Picasso paints Glass of Absinthe, an "analytic cubist" oil on canvas. | |
1912 | Picasso paints Bottle of Pernod and Glass, a "synthetic cubist" oil on canvas. | |
Jul 25, 1912 | US Department of Agriculture issues Food Inspection Decision 147, banning absinthe in the United States. | |
1913 | Charles Foley's one-act play Absinthe performed for the first time at the Grand Guignol in Paris. | |
1914 | Picasso creates Glass of Absinthe, a painted bronze sculpture. | |
1915 | Absinthe banned in France by Chamber of Deputies. | |
Mar 16, 1915 | Absinthe officially banned in France. | |
1990 | Wormwood extracts found to be as effective in supressing malaria as chloroquine | |
Dec 6, 2008 | Entheogenesis Australis Symposium [Details] [More Info] |
References
- Pendell D. Pharmako / Poeia. Mercury House, 1995.
- Padosch SA, Lachenmeier DW, Kroener LU. "Absinthism: a fictitious 19th century syndrome with present impact". Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2006;1(1):14.
- Pendell D. Pharmako / Poeia. Mercury House, 1995.
- Ott J. Pharmacotheon, The Natural Products Co. 1993.