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Food Stories: The Sultan's Coffee Prohibition

03/24/06 @ 09:44:36 am, by Kate Hopkins Email 4605 views • Categories: Food History, Coffee

Murad IV was a the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1623 to 1640, and a particularly insidious one to boot. He's also a fairly grisly footnote in the history of coffee.

It is said that the Murad often walked the city in disguise in order to hear what the public were saying about him. On his first sojourn into the public, he stopped in a tavern and heard people singing and watched them getting drunk.

He then moved on to a coffeehouse and saw the customers engaging in conversations about the politics, the empire and the sorry state thereof. The coffee drinkers blamed the bad state of the government on the administration and Murad himself. The sultan, clearly concerned, went back to his palace to think upon what he had learned.

His decision? To ban coffee and coffeehouses under the Islamic rule that intoxicants were forbidden.

The cafés in Istanbul were closed and in some cases destroyed. If it was discovered that a person had been drinking coffee, they were beaten. If they were discovered to have consumed coffee a second time, they were sewn into a leather bag and tossed into the Bosphorus (also known as the Istanbul Strait). Murad's despisement of coffee drinkers (and smokers, which was also associated with coffeehouses) was so great that he was known to walk the streets of Istanbul with an executioner, and ordered the beheading of anyone he saw drinking coffee or smoking. It is reported that between 10,000 to 100,000 people were executed during this purge of coffee.

One of the end results of this? The coffee makers and café proprietors of Turkey moved out of the country and migrated to places such as Italy, France, Austria and Britain.

The punchline? Murad died at the age of 28. The cause? Alcohol poisoning. It seems that Murad was an alcoholic. Under his reign, Alcohol was technically forbidden, and many drinkers of alcohol were also executed, but Taverns were allowed to stay open while drinkers of coffee were put to death and the coffee industry was forced to immigrate.

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Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Tina [Visitor] · http://tinas-shark-tank.blogspot.com
"Murad died at the age of ."

Is there supposed to be a number in there?
PermalinkPermalink 03/24/06 @ 10:04
Comment from: Mithrandir [Visitor] · http://www.soundandfury.info/
That's awesome. Thanks.

Murad's public policy reminds me of the whole Soma thing in Brave New World.
PermalinkPermalink 03/24/06 @ 13:28
Comment from: MM [Visitor] · http://thefeastcrusade.blogspot.com
Recently in Singapore, there was an Arabic cafe which tried to deny service to some Danish tourists because of the comics controversy. The authorities had to threaten them with closure and arrest if they did not stop their protest. Following that the usual police patrols on that street of cafes increased threefolds. Instead of seeing the police patrol cars coming round 3 times a night, suddenly there were 10.

It is true that cafes attract the most political discourses. Among the Muslims in Singapore, it is the shisha cafes. Where the common beverage is coffee or mint tea. Among the Chinese, it is the neighbourhood kopi-tiams (coffeshops in Chinese). The common beverage in the kopi-tiams is beer. But I seldom, if ever, see the kopi-tiams being patrolled. Always thought that was rather interesting.

PermalinkPermalink 03/24/06 @ 16:45
Comment from: foodcrazee [Visitor] · http://foodcrazee.blogspot.com
thats interesting......never heard of this prohibition before...
PermalinkPermalink 03/24/06 @ 19:52
Comment from: Glutton Cat [Visitor] · http://www.oburkedi.com/en
As far as I know, Murad IV banned alcohol and tobacco. The reason behind this prohibition was the big city fires caused by the drunk smokers in Istanbul those years.

I have never heard about coffee prohibition before. And I would never guess, since coffee has an important place in the culture.

(Quick Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murat_IV)
PermalinkPermalink 03/25/06 @ 05:10
Comment from: Kate Hopkins [Member] Email · http://www.accidentalhedonist.com
Both The Devil's Cup and The Devil's Picnic cover this bit of History. (Two different Authors). I love Wiki, but it's only a starting place for me, not the end all.
PermalinkPermalink 03/25/06 @ 05:14
Comment from: Glutton Cat [Visitor] · http://www.oburkedi.com/en
I added these books to my must read list.

Thanks.
PermalinkPermalink 03/25/06 @ 07:21
Comment from: dharamraj.reddy [Visitor] Email · http://google
Why and when do we celebrate International coffee day
PermalinkPermalink 07/10/08 @ 07:34
Comment from: drug addiction treatment [Visitor] Email · http://thebluestateconservatives.com/?p=131
I hate coffee, any kind of coffee. There are a lot of diseases caused by coffee. For example your liver will become weak from the addiction that coffee can prevent. So be careful.
PermalinkPermalink 07/10/08 @ 10:45

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