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mardi 15 novembre 2011

Manet
The Absinthe Drinker
Manet

1859 Edouard Manet (1832-1883) creates the first great Absinthe painting.

L'absinthe Degas
L'absinthe Degas (1834-1917)

1870 The Absinthe Boom Vineyards in France are almost destroyed by the Phylloxera bug. Wine is scarce for the next 30 years. Absinthe takes its place.

Punch cartoon
'Phylloxera, a true gourmet, finds out the best vineyards and attaches itself to the best wines' Punch cartoon
Gogh
1887 Still Life With Absinthe Van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh, by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 1887
Green Muse
The Green Muse Maignan

Parisian Decadence

By the 1890s The Moulin Rouge is in full swing. Absinthe has outgrown its cult status and is enjoyed by millions.

Moulin Rouge
Moulin Rouge by Lautrec
Death

1905 Swiss farmer, Jean Lanfray, murdered his wife and daughters sparking a national campaign to obtain a ban on absinthe. Lanfray was said to be under the influence of absinthe when he shot his family – he was also known to be a wine guzzling alcoholic, who had washed down two glasses of absinthe with no less than a crème de menthe, a cognac, six glasses of wine with lunch, a glass of wine before leaving work, coffee with brandy and more wine before committing his crime.

1906 Absinthe was banned in Belgum and in 1908absinthe was successfully banned in Switzerland whereas France consumed a whopping 36,000,000 litres!

At the height of its popularity in 1915 absinthe was banned in France. Absinthe became caught up in the temperance movement that was sweeping Europe, thus becoming the scapegoat for alcohol. Pressure came from wine producers, who saw it as competition to their ailing wine trade trying to recover after the bout of phylloxera. Findings were also published showing that although small quantities of thujone were beneficial, extremely large quantities were a neurotoxin. Traditional absinthe became a thing of the past and was replaced by Pastis (a reformed version of absinthe omitting the vital ingredient – wormwood).

Delayahe
Marie-Claude Delahaye

Marie-Claude Delahaye &
George Rowley

The Return of La Fée - In 1998, George Rowley, entrepreneur and specialty drinks importer, begins investigating the worldwide absinthe bans world. On July 21st, 1998 he secures the UK government’s authorization on the landmark document allowing absinthe to be legally sold in the European Union. He works closely with Marie-Claude Delahaye, the world-expert on absinthe to ensure the utter authenticity of La Fée.

certificate

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