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New Research Reveals Binge Drinking Initiated by Religious Anglicans in 1660s
University of Warwick ^ | 20/07/2004 | Angela McShane-Jones, History Department, University of Warwick

Posted on 07/20/2004 6:46:59 PM PDT by ckilmer

New Research Reveals Binge Drinking Initiated by Religious Anglicans in 1660s Date :20/07/2004 Type : Press Release

Drinking Woodcut As David Blunkett claims a rise in binge drinking is helping to breed a culture of ‘thuggery and intimidation’ new research from the University of Warwick reveals that rather than originating the 1960s binge drinking was rife in the 1660s. What’s more, it was religious Anglicans, demonstrating their loyalty to the Crown in the Civil War that initiated heavy drinking.

From early on the British developed a culture where drunkenness is a rite of passage, especially for the young as they work out their allegiances.

The paper ‘Roaring Royalists and Ranting Brewers’ by historian Angela McShane-Jones examines 17th century broadside ballads, the equivalent of today’s pop music, pamphlets and court records, to reveal that drink and drunkenness went hand in hand with political allegiance as drink and song became linked with politics. The widespread ritual consumption of wine, or health drinking, developed as an expression of loyalty to King and Church. This was a practice of Cavaliers, Tories and Jacobites.

Although new crime figures released this week show a rise in 'violence against the person' and the number of people drinking over the 'safe limit' is rising, McShane-Jones also reveals that anti-social behaviour resulting from alcohol consumption is far from new.

17th century court records reveal a string of drink induced anti-social behaviour. The archives record a case of several Royalists drinking to the King’s health in their own blood at a Bedfordshire alehouse. The game where royalists cut off their rumps and drank their blood instead of wine went horribly wrong when an inebriated drinker was overzealous in slicing his body. Cases of violent death though drinking are also recorded, including a case where a man was stabbed to death following a fight as a sailor drank to the health of Charles II.

In the 1670s political differences evolved into an opposition between drinking Tories (who claimed to be merry and loyal), and sober Whigs. Drinking in company became an important part of the Royalist political culture.

Whigs and Tories attacked each other through ballads in terms of their consumption of drink. The drunken behaviour of the Cavaliers was now hurled at the Tories. Tories then imposed a ‘double-whammy’ on the Whigs. Continuing the image of drinking and loyalty, Tories made a virtue of their revelling. They claimed a major difference between their merry, loyal revelry and the miserable, seditious sobriety of the Whigs.

What a Whig needed, Tory ballads argued, was a good few pints (of wine) poured down him and the immediate improvement in his spirits would soon convince him to be loyal too. The Courtier’s Health suggested, ‘He that denies the brimmer/ we’ll drown him in canary and make him all our own./And when his heart is merry/ he’l drink to Charles in’s throne’.

Angela McShane-Jones, from the University of Warwick, said: “Binge drinking is far from a modern problem. ‘Saint Monday’ was a phrase indicating the inability of people to work on a Monday because of the way they had entertained themselves after church the day before.”

By modern expectations, early modern consumption of alcohol was strikingly high. Account books of a Berkshire farmer, Robert Loder, between 1611 and 1618 indicate on average between 6 and 8 pints of beer were consumed per person, each day.

Not all late 17th century alcohol consumption was loyal health drinking, and hangovers plagued tipplers. In his diaries Samuel Pepys records days of heavy, but not atypical, drinking. Pepys notes in detail the ailments he suffered after drinking: ‘I could not sleep … being overheated with drink … [and] quite out of order’; ‘my brains somewhat troubled with so much wine’; ‘About the middle of the night I was very ill, I think with eating and drinking too much … and vomited in the bason.’

Merry drinking was acceptable, but drunkeness was frowned on. When Pepys realised he was developing a reputation as a heavy drinker, he was ‘much troubled’.

For more information contact: Angela McShane-Jones, History Department, University of Warwick, Tel: 02476 574691, Mobile: 07748653734 or Jenny Murray, Communications Office, University of Warwick, Tel: 02476 574 255, Mobile: 07876217740

Further Information ‘Roaring Royalists and Ranting Brewers’ is in A Pleasing Sinne, 2004, published by Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Associated Media Drinking Woodcut


TOPICS: Culture/Society; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: bingedrinking; england; tories; whigs

1 posted on 07/20/2004 6:47:00 PM PDT by ckilmer
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To: ckilmer
Remember these were religious anglicans, as opposed to the irrelgious ones who allow gay priests.
2 posted on 07/20/2004 6:50:20 PM PDT by Odyssey-x
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To: ckilmer

And they pay these ivory tower geniuses? Good grief, binge drinking has been around since the first man created the first alcoholic beverage. As for binge drinking in England goes, I'm sure that if these noted and hard working "scholars" did a little bit more work, they might find that the Normans, the Angles and Saxons, the Britons, the Celts, the Picts and every other tribe and nation that has used the island as their doormat has a history of binge drinking. Sheesh....


3 posted on 07/20/2004 6:51:51 PM PDT by egarvue (Martin Sheen is not my president...)
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To: ckilmer
Yep, it all started with the Anglicans.

Romans never drank to excess. </ sarc>

4 posted on 07/20/2004 6:57:11 PM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: ckilmer
Right...Well...that certainly explains that.

"Back to the vomitorium Lads...we've wine to drink, wenches to fondle and plotting to do!"

5 posted on 07/20/2004 7:07:17 PM PDT by Khurkris (Proud Scottish/HillBilly - We perfected "The Art of the Grudge")
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To: ckilmer

PLEASE do not tell me that this "research" was funded by a state or federal grant - please!!!


6 posted on 07/20/2004 7:08:07 PM PDT by taxcontrol (People are entitled to their opinion - no matter how wrong it is.)
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To: ckilmer
Certainly the decline of civilization began with these drunken Anglicans in the 1660's! I just wish we could all go back to the quiet, sedate times of the Vikings, the Huns, the Romans, and the Greeks. Those folks never drank to excess. I mean, sure the Romans had rooms called "vomitorium", but it's not not these were intended to be used during all-night drinking parties.

Nope. It was the Anglicans that started it all.

7 posted on 07/20/2004 7:09:11 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy (The Fourth Estate is a Fifth Column)
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To: egarvue
I'm sure that if these noted and hard working "scholars" did a little bit more work, they might find that the Normans, the Angles and Saxons, the Britons, the Celts, the Picts and every other tribe and nation that has used the island as their doormat has a history of binge drinking. Sheesh....

The Gododdin
(The Book of Aneirin)

Aneirin, c.600

... The men went to Catraeth, loquacious was their host;
Fresh mead was their feast, and also their poison.

...

The men marched with speed, together they bounded onward;
Short-lived were they—having become drunk over the clarified mead.
The retinue of Mynyddawg, renowned in a trial,
Their life was the price of their banquet of mead;—

...

By reason of mead free drunk, a multitude went over the boundary.
In the action at the goal, for the preservation of law.
Cynan, the energetic chief from Mona, acted justly as regards the higher orders.
Tudvwlch and Cyvwlch made breaches in the heights of Caers;
With Mynyddawg disastrous did their wassails prove.
A year of longing for the men of Catraeth is cherished by me;—
Their steel blades, their mead, their vehemence, and their fetters.
They assemble in arms, the ranks are formed; do I not hear the tumult?

AND SO IT ENDETH.

8 posted on 07/20/2004 7:10:50 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (/"Despise not the jester. Often he is the only one speaking the truth")
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To: ckilmer

It's Jesus' fault! He turned water into wine!!


9 posted on 07/20/2004 7:18:16 PM PDT by TheSpottedOwl ("In the Kingdom of the Deluded, the Most Outrageous Liar is King".)
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To: ckilmer

Why did they write this?

Remember the words of Antonio Gramsci:
(this is a simple outline of Gramsci's methods)

...E. Both Capitalism and Judaeo-Christian culture must be destroyed before a Communist revolution can succeed
......1. Religious sentiment cannot be destroyed through legislation, as Lenin believed, but must be redirected from the divine to the state
.........a. Terror will only drive Religion underground
.........b. Religion will then reemerge when Leninism fails
.........c. So Religion must be destroyed in the minds of men

http://focus.gohotsprings.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=434


10 posted on 07/20/2004 7:23:19 PM PDT by steplock ( www.spadata.com)
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To: ckilmer

Another evidence of the deceitfulness and stupidity of the hyper-religious George W. Bush.

/sarcasm


11 posted on 07/20/2004 9:12:18 PM PDT by JmyBryan
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To: sockmonkey; Askel5; Domestic Church

ping to post Number 10.


12 posted on 07/20/2004 9:15:32 PM PDT by Maeve (Our Lady of Sorrows, pray for us.)
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To: steplock

13 posted on 07/20/2004 9:27:04 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (/"Despise not the jester. Often he is the only one speaking the truth")
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To: nuconvert; ahadams2

ping


14 posted on 07/21/2004 3:20:51 PM PDT by sionnsar (Azadi baraye Iran ||| Resource for Traditional Anglicans: trad-anglican.faithweb.com)
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To: ahadams2; sionnsar; Grampa Dave; AnAmericanMother; N. Theknow; Ray'sBeth; hellinahandcart; ...

another 'things that make you go hmm...' ping.


15 posted on 07/21/2004 7:35:18 PM PDT by ahadams2 (http://trad-anglican.faithweb.com is the url for the Anglican Freeper Resource Page)
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To: Odyssey-x
===Remember these were religious anglicans, as opposed to the irrelgious ones who allow gay priests.===

LOL! Of course.

Today, I'd hope we recognize that, although the alcoholic has an illness of some sort, drunkenness is a sin. I'd hope we help him to find treatment for his condition, and use community supports (like AA for example). I'd hope we wouldn't tolerate his being disruptive while intoxicated at church. Above all, I'd hope we wouldn't try to "rethink our understanding about alcoholics in light of changes in recent medical understanding."

In other words, I'd hope we don't compromise on drunkenness the way we have on homosexuality. This I say as an alkie myself.
16 posted on 07/22/2004 11:22:08 AM PDT by baldie (self-inflicted)
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