4,000,000
BC Proto-simians develop large
brains (suitable for bar tab calculations), stereoscopic vision (a prerequisite
for double-vision), and opposable thumbs (to hold a drinking vessel).
Our ancestors now have the capacity, if not the keg, to party down.
150,000
BC Australopithecus
Man realizes that sucking on rotted fruit adds joy to the two most
popular Xtreme sports of the day: 1) Spearing wooly mammoths, and 2)
Running from wounded and angry woolly mammoths. The possibility of food
poisoning and the horrid flavor merely adds to the excitement, prompting
grunting contests of: "Taste grates!" and "Less killing!"
12,000
BC Sumerians
learn how to brew beer. While it was once universally accepted that
nomadic tribes first settled down to cultivate grains for bread, some
historians now believe they built villages to make brew.
4,000
BC A formula
for beer, the world's oldest known recipe, is inscribed onto a clay
tablet. Part of an epic poem devoted to Ninkasi, the Sumerian goddess
of beer, it harkens back to a time when Iraqis drank beer and were cool.
3000
BC The
Gilgamesh Epic, perhaps the oldest written story on earth, is put
to stone. In this Sumerian tale Enkidu, a shaggy, unkempt, and thoroughly
uncouth man decides to jump Gilgamesh, a local demigod. Taking no chances,
Gilgamesh dispatches a whore to Enkidu to learn of his strengths and
weaknesses. Instead, the harlot gives him six beers and "in this
condition he washed himself and became a human being." Proving
all you need is a sixer and a prostitute to civilize the most savage
of men.
2400
BC Beer
is rationed to the slaves building the Egyptian pyramids. Conversations
around the beer cooler range from, "That head whip man Cherops
is a real asshole," to "I heard we're building this fucker
because some fancy pants wants to make a big splash in the afterlife.
Believe that shit?"
2600
BC The
Sumerian empire collapses and the Babylonians take over the beer brewing
process, developing over 20 different types of beer.
2800
BC A brilliant
isolated tribe living off the coast of Scotland begin brewing a hallucinogenic
ale out of, among other things, hemlock, nightshade and cow dung. Undoubtedly
prompting the first unironic usage of the phrase: "Hey, this beer
tastes like shit."
1810
BC In Mesopotamia,
King Simrilim's alchemists discover the secrets of distillation. Afraid
to drink what they think might be a powerful poison, they use it as
a base for perfumes, totally missing the boat.
1800
BC The
fad of chewing rice, chestnuts and millet then spitting the mush into
a tub to ferment sweeps China. Confucius later quips: "Man with
big mouth should make delicious beer, not bodacious boasts."
1790
BC The
Laws of Hammurabi codifies the making, selling, and purchasing of wine
in Babylon. Instead of merely getting stiffed, bartenders who screw
up are punished with loss of limbs and drowning.
1500
BC Greeks
develop the first drinking games, including: Make the Phallic-Shaped
Wine Vessel Disappear, Hide and Go Sleep It Off, Don't Bogart the Wine
Skin, and Dionysus Made Me Sleep With Your Five Wives.
1100
BC A forerunner
of Modern Drunkard Magazine appears. In the Finnish poetic saga
Kalewala, 200 verses are used to describe the creation of the
earth, while 400 are devoted to beer.
1050
BC The
Romans learn the secret of wine making from the Phoenicians. They expand
on the basic recipe, developing varieties that include seawater, vinegar,
resin and turpentine, a tradition carried on today by the Thunderbird
and Night Train wineries.
1000
BC
Vikings start the fad of using the skulls of their enemies
as drinking vessels, prompting the cautionary phrase, "You better
watch it, fat head, or I'll tell the Vikings where you live."
900
BC The
ritual of binge drinking (in layman's terms "partying hard")
becomes popular among Teutons in northern Europe because poor preservation
techniques and seasonal availability of ingredients dictate periods
of feast and famine.
800
BC The
first wine snob rears his ugly nose. Roman scribe Tacitus writes: "To
drink, the Teutons have a horrible brew fermented from barley or wheat,
a brew which is very far removed our excellent wines."
323 AD
Alexander the Great
drinks himself to death during his "Thirty-Third Birth Day/I Just
Kicked the Entire Known World's Ass" blow out.
30
AD Performing his first miracle, Jesus turns water into wine at a wedding,
rescuing the occasion from becoming a dull affair. Christ's entourage
soon doubles.
100
AD Early
Christians introduce wine into their religious ceremonies. The Catholic
Church would later ritualize the ceremony as Mass, and "the religion
that kicks down free wine" spreads like wildfire to every corner
of the globe.
300
AD Aztecs
ferment cactus into pulque, doubling the attendance of Hurl The Human Head Through
The Hoop matches. They also develop the "rabbit scale" to
describe degrees of intoxication, ranging from very mild intoxication
(a couple rabbits) to heavy drunkenness (400 rabbits). The phrase, "I'm
gonna get as pulqued up as 400 rabbits fucking" becomes commonplace.
476
AD German
barbarians on a heavily-armed road trip to check out Roman wines sack
Rome, inadvertently bringing on the Dark Ages. Later the barbarians
would apologize, explaining they "only wanted to party."
500
AD Monasteries
take over the brewing of beer, prodded by the fact that beer was not
considered food, so was permitted during periods of fasting. In many
monasteries, each monk was allowed to drink 5 liters of beer per day.
Monk scrolls from the period are littered with affirmations of: "Dude,
God is so cool."
600
AD An early
form of whiskey is invented in Ireland by monks who had traveled to
the Near East to learn the secrets of perfume distillation. Reckoning
it's a far better thing to feel great than smell good, they apply the
formula to fermented barley and coin the phrase, "Let's get stinkin'
drunk."
625
AD Mohammed
declares alcohol is evil. Europeans wonder, "Well, what shall the
Muslims do for fun?"
711
AD Muslims
invade Europe.
732
AD Ferocious
winehead Charles Martel defeats the Moors at the Battle of Tours, rescuing
Europe from the horrors of sobriety.
1000
AD The
first beer-witches are burned at the stake. When batches went bad, the
brewers, fearful of thirsty and vengeful villagers, blamed black magic
and rounded up the nearest old lady with more than five cats. Much as
the bartenders of today blame lousy pours of Guinness on the evil magic
of "goddamn distributors who won't clean the fucking lines."
1150
AD The
Slavs invent vodka. The Russians cleverly call it "little water,"
as in: "I ain't drinking, I'm just having a little water."
1171
AD English
soldiers under King Henry II invade Ireland and discover the locals
are making whiskey. They still haven't left.
1241
AD Ogendai
Khan, Genghis' successor, drinks himself to death on the eve of battle.
Bummed out by their Party Meister's death, the Mongol Hordes are defeated
outside Vienna and start a long hungover march back to Mongolia.
1250
AD Franciscan
philosopher and theologian Raimundus Lullus declares alcohol is ultima
consolatio corporus humani (the greatest comfort for the human body.)
Boozeheads of the day respond with anche, li ottiene bevuti (also,
it gets you loaded.)
1494
AD Proper
scotch whiskey makes its first appearance when Friar John Corr gets
his hands on enough malt to produce more than 1000 bottles of strong
hooch. It was marketed in Scotland as good medicine, providing relief
from a wide variety of ailments, including being cold, sober, thirsty
or under attack by the English.
1500
AD Not
thinking much of the local cactus brew, Spanish conquistadors in Mexico
begin distilling the Aztec's pulque and come up with a mezcal wine.
They are now only a short step away from tequila and long arrest records.
1516
AD Germans
institute the Reinheitsgebot, a law dictating that beer can be
made from only four ingredients: barley, hops, yeast, and water. The
Budweiser family prepares to flee the country.
1530
AD Theophrastus
Philippus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim coins the word alcohol,
which he cribbed from the Arabic word al-kuhl, meaning "delicate
powder." It quickly replaces the earlier, wussyish expression
spiritus vini.
1620
AD The
Puritans land the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock because they're running
low on supplies, "especially our beere." This was despite
the fact they loaded on more brew than water before they sailed for
the New World.
1621
AD The
Puritans and local natives sit down for the first Thanksgiving Dinner.
While there isn't any cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes
or pumpkin pie to be had, there is plenty of brandy, gin, and wine on
hand. The natives suggest they should not only do this once a year,
but maybe every week.
1600
AD The
manufacture of rum becomes colonial New England's largest and most prosperous
industry. Ironically, the pirates who preyed upon the rum ships are
now the namesakes of many present-day brands of the liquor.
1650
AD Dutchman
Dr. Franciscus Sylvius invents gin by infusing grain alcohol with juniper
berries. The doctor insists it is strictly for "medicinal purposes"
and prescribes it for cold feet, insomnia, and headaches caused by drinking
too much medicine the night before.
1689
AD Dutchman
William of Orange takes the throne of England, fancies up his name to
King William III, then turns on the entire nation to gin. In a single
generation gin will almost magically transform Englishmen from barbaric
ale-swilling savages into savage gin-swilling barbarians.
1690
AD Blind
Benedictine Monk Dom Perignon screws up a batch of wine and accidentally
invents champagne. Upon tasting the disaster, he tries to put a nice
face on it by declaring, "Come quickly, brothers, I'm drinking
stars! This is exactly what I was trying to do! Man, don't you get
it? Soulless celebrities will pay major francs for this crap!"
The following morning Dom declares, "I feel head fire!"
1740
AD Grog
becomes a staple of the British Navy. The tradition of watering down
rum continues today. In certain bars.
1750
AD The
mint julep is invented in either Kentucky or Maryland. This refreshing
pick-me-up quickly becomes the morning coffee of the upper class, who
don't have to be sober for work.
1763
AD The
first possible invention of the martini. Depending on which outrageous
lie you wish to believe, it was invented by either a Parisian nobleman
(a lying Frenchman), a New Orleans distiller (a descendant of lying
Frenchmen), a Colonial-Era barmaid (every known one to tell the truth?),
a bartender in California (see previous), a Midwestern housewife (ha!)
and about a dozen others.
1775
AD General
George Washington issues orders that Colonial soldiers are to receive
a daily ration of four ounces of either rum or whiskey. The American
troops win their first major battle two weeks later.
1776
AD Thomas Jefferson pens the first draft of the Declaration of Independence
in a Philadelphia tavern. The final draft, written while sober, would
omit the provisions demanding
"Faster service from the goddamn lazy barmaids" and "I
think it self-evident that if some guys leave one party and go somewhere
else and throw their own party, the guys from the first party don't
have the right to come over and drink all the other guys' beer."
1787
AD Following
the drafting of the U.S. Constitution, the 55 signers throw a shindig,
consuming 54 bottles of Madeira, 60 bottles of claret, 8 bottles of
whiskey, 22 bottles of port, 8 bottles of hard cider, 12 beers and seven
bowls of alcohol punch large enough that "ducks could swim in them."
This is also the first recorded instance of Ben Franklin doing his "hold
this kite string for a second" prank.
1789
AD Undoubtedly
inspired by the Almighty, Elijah Craig, a Baptist minister, invents
bourbon in Georgetown, Kentucky.
1792
AD Dr.
Pierre Ordinaire invents absinthe in Switzerland. Rather familiarly,
the doctor declares it a healthful medicine, and any drunken madness
that might result is purely coincidental.
1801
AD Thomas
Jefferson runs up a wine bill of $10,835 ($103,000 in modern dollars)
while president. He informs the nation, "I'll get you back next
week."
1806
AD The
term cocktail is used in print the first time in the American
magazine The Balance. It supplants the term bittered sling,
and the previously disdained Sixty Horrifying Minutes of Bittered
Slings is replaced by the much more popular Cocktail Hour.
1810
AD The
future King Ludwig I's wedding party is so kick-ass it becomes an annual
event known as Oktoberfest.
1814
AD A ragtag collection of drunkards, led by a super-drunkard (future
President Andrew Jackson), defeats a numerically superior and disgracefully
sober force of British soldiers in the Battle of New Orleans. The city
is now safe for 24-hour boozing and breast-flashing sorority girls.
1815
AD On the
eve of the Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon Bonaparte declares, "I
drink champagne when I win, to celebrate ... and I drink champagne when
I lose to console myself. So no matter what goes down tomorrow, I'm
getting loaded."
1825
AD The
gin and tonic is invented in India by British soldiers. The quinine-laced
tonic water was proscribed as a malaria preventive, and the ingenious
troops found adding gin made the nasty stuff slide right down. A chunk
of lime was later added to fight scurvy during sea voyages. Churchill
would later declare, "The gin and tonic has saved more Englishmen's
lives, and minds, than all the doctors in the Empire."
1850
AD The
corkscrew is invented. Drunks no longer have to push the cork down into
the bottle with a pen. For the first time, beer is sold in bottles.
1862
AD A perpetually
loaded General Ulysses S. Grant saves the Union from destruction. President
Lincoln, when informed that General Grant preferred to guzzle whiskey
while leading the troops, replies, "Find out the name of the brand
so I can give it to my other generals."
1863 AD A precocious 13-year-old
lad named Jack Daniels buys a distillery in Lynchburg, Tennessee and
begins producing his own brand of whiskey. By the time he bought the
distillery, young Jack had already six years experience distilling liquor.
1873
AD The
number of legal breweries in America peaks at 4,131.
1874
AD Lady
Randolph Churchill, Winston Churchill's mother, invents the Manhattan.
1890
AD The
highball is invented in a St. Louis saloon.
1898
AD The
Daiquiri is conceived by American engineer Jennings Cox in Cuba, ostensively
to combat outbreaks of malaria. Bars in Havana run ads stating: "Which
sounds cooler: Drunk on Daquiris or Death by Disease? Eh, Gringo?"
1899
AD The
first political cocktail, the Cuba Libre (Free Cuba) is invented
near the end of the Spanish American War when an American officer mixes
rum with an otherwise useless beverage called Coca-Cola.
1901
AD Absinthe devotee Pablo Picasso begins his Blue
Period, followed shortly by his Hammered Beyond All Belief Period.
1910
AD Absinthe
is banned in the nation of its birth, Switzerland. Dozens of countries
follow suit and France, the last holdout, declares the manufacture and
consumption of absinthe illegal in 1915.
1915
AD The
Singapore Sling is invented by barman Ngiam Tong Boon at Raffle's Hotel
in Singapore.
1920
AD Prohibition
goes into effect in the United States.
1922
AD The
Lost Generation begins forming up in Paris. Americas finest young writers,
fleeing prohibition in their native land, use the backdrop of post-war
Europe and untold amounts of booze to create some of the 20th Century's
finest literature.
1923
AD Illegal
speakeasies usher in the Lounge Era. These underground clubs boast swank
interiors, overpriced booze, and, yes, women. Prohibition, which was
largely instigated by women, is now serving to introduce women to bars
and the men who like to drink in them.
1929
AD Since
the start of Prohibition, 700,000,000 gallons of beer, wine and liquor
have been illicitly produced (and drank) in the US. In Paris, a devastating
blow is delivered to hangovers as Pete Petoit develops the first prototype
of the Bloody Mary in Harry's Bar.
1930
AD Don
"the Beachcomber Beach" creates the Zombie as a hangover cure.
1933
AD FDR
signs the bill that dissolves Prohibition, and celebrates with the first
(legal) martini in 13 years. Sadly, many American breweries would not
survive the drought and America is now stuck with a handful of ever-growing
macrobreweries. With $5,000 and a recipe found in a pamphlet borrowed
from a public Library, brothers Ernest and Julio Gallo began building
a wine-making empire. In the next eighty years they will produce millions
of gallons of "budget" wine and inflict nearly as many psyche-shattering
hangovers.
1935
AD Jagermeister
is invented in Wolfenbuttel, Germany. On the other side of the Atlantic,
canned beer is introduced by the Kreuger Brewing Company in Richmond,
VA.
1938
AD Writer
H. L. Mencken announces that 17,864,392,788 different cocktails can
be made from the ingredients in a well-stocked bar. The Bartender's
Guild considers having him assassinated.
1939
AD France
fearfully watches Germany rearm under the guidance of a teetotaler with
a Charlie Chaplin mustache. France wonders, "What shall he do for
fun?"
1940
AD Germany
invades France.
1944
AD Trader
Vic invents the Mai Tai in Oakland, CA.
1945
AD The
Allies, led by full-bore boozers Churchill, FDR and Stalin, defeat the
Axis Powers, led by a sinister cabal of teetotalers and lightweights.
The world is now safe for drinkers. And democracy.
1948
AD Happy
Hour is invented in Chicago.
1947
AD Humphrey
Bogart forms the first incarnation of the Rat Pack in Hollywood. Later
headed by Frank Sinatra, the Pack would dictate what was hip until the
hippies came along and screwed everything up. In St. Louis, the Hyde
Park brewery airs the first beer commercial on television.
1950
AD Flying
in the face of the Red Scare, vodka begins to dominate the world market.
The Screwdriver soon becomes the most popular drink in America.
1951
AD Trader
Vic opens restaurants in San Francisco, Oakland, and Beverly Hills,
and cocktail lounges in Seattle and Chicago. Soldiers returning from
the Pacific flock to the Polynesian themed bars, ushering in the Tiki
Era.
1953
AD The
Pina Colada is first assembled in the Hotel Caribe Hilton in Puerto
Rico by Ramón Marrero. The coconut cocktail would go on to win a global
competition and inspire Rupert Holmes to pen a song so insidiously catchy
it would haunt an entire generation.
1958
AD Ernest
Hemingway issues a challenge to the rest of America by consuming 16
of his signature Papa Dobles cocktails in a single sitting (more than
60oz of strong rum), then walking home. Accepting the challenge, America
enters a golden age of guzzling, led by celebrity avatars like Jackie
Gleason, Dean Martin, Robert Mitchum and Richard Burton.
1960
AD The
Rat Pack begins holding court at the Sands Hotel in Vegas. The Swinger
Era begins.
1962
AD John
F. Kennedy and Ernest Hemingway's public thirst for daiquiris ignites
a pop culture phenomenon.
1963
AD The
pop top beer can is introduced by the Iron City Beer Brewing Company
in Pittsburgh.
1964
AD Sean
Connery, as James Bond, not only asks for vodka in his martini, but
also insists it be shaken, not stirred, releasing a two-headed gorgon
of controversy. Soon every Playboy subscriber in the civilized
world is donning a tuxedo jacket and swilling vodka martinis.
1970
AD Wineries
rapidly spread throughout California and wine spritzers and disco music
suspiciously arrive at the exact same time.
1972
AD The
Long Island Ice Tea is invented by a Long Island Bartender Robert C.
"Rosebud" Butt. In defiance of all previously known laws of
mixology, tequila, rum, vodka, and gin are made to play nice together.
1975
AD Androgynous
cocktails such as the Tequila Sunrise and the Harvey Wallbanger, along
with a plethora of self-help books encouraging sensitivity and outright
crying, lay heavy siege to the collective masculinity of the modern
male.
1978
AD President
Jimmy Carter, in an attempt to atone for his many failures, legalizes
home brewing.
1980
AD The
first boxed wines appear in Australia and the trend soon spreads to
the U.S. Drunks now have the power to tumble down a flight of stairs
with two liters of wine in their hands without the worry of picking
shards of glass out of their skulls while bawling over spilled wine.
Jokes about American beer become popular throughout the world because
as the U.S.'s 44 brewing companies produce virtually the same product:
a light, tasteless, over-carbonated lager.
1981
AD As state
laws are relaxed, microbreweries start popping up across the nation.
America's reputation as a decent beer-producing nation is redeemed.
The population of beer snobs also multiples.
1985
AD Bartles
& James takes a chance on a bizarre ad campaign featuring two old
coots sitting on a porch asking you to buy their light and fruity wines.
A wine cooler craze soon sweeps the nation, instantly doubling the chances
of pimply high-school kids getting laid after the prom.
1987
AD Fueled
by rumors that it contains morphine extracts, Jagermeister explodes
out of New Orleans and sweeps the nation. It effectively secures the
middle ground between manly shots (tequila and whiskey) and wussy shots
(Kamikazes and fruit schnapps). The finest drinking movie ever made,
the Bukowski-scripted Barfly, is released.
1990
AD The
martini and the lounge make triumphant comebacks. On their back arrives
the pseudo-martini craze, whereas even a dead rat served in a stemmed
glass can be called a martini. This is also the era of the ribaldly-named
cocktail, including the Sex on the Beach, Screaming Orgasm and Sloe
Comfortable Screw.
1992
AD Flavored
vodkas begin fighting for space on the bar shelves.
1996
AD Modern
Drunkard Magazine is launched.
2003
AD Nearly
2000 breweries are now in operation in the United States, surpassing
the number in existence prior to Prohibition. -FKR