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Men should thank women for creating beer!

Updated on: 31 March,2010 02:41 PM IST  | 
ANI |

An academic has claimed that beer would have never come into existence without the entrepreneurial skills of women.

Men should thank women for creating beer!

An academic has claimed that beer would have never come into existence without the entrepreneurial skills of women.u00a0


According to a report in The Telegraph, Jane Peyton, an author and historian, said that women created beer and for thousands of years it was only they who were allowed to operate breweries and drink beer.u00a0


Peyton said that up until 200 years ago, beer was considered a food and fell into the remit of women's work.u00a0


It was only then that men began drinking it and it became what is considered a very male drink.

Peyton has conducted extensive research into the origins of beer for a new book, and discovered to her surprise that a woman's touch was found on beer throughout the ages.u00a0

Nearly 7,000 years ago in Mesopotamia and Sumeria, so important were their skills that they were the only ones allowed to brew the drink or run any taverns.u00a0

In almost all ancient societies, beer was also then considered to be a gift from a goddess, never a male God.u00a0

Between the eighth and tenth centuries AD, the Vikings spread terror by rampaging through Europe, fuelled by women-made ale.u00a0

Women were the exclusive brewers in Norse society and all equipment by law remained their property.

Ancient Finland also credits the creation of beer to the fairer sex, with three women, a bear's saliva and wild honey the apparent first ingredients.u00a0

In England, ale was traditionally made in the home by women. They were known as brewsters or ale-wives and the sale of the drink provided a valuable income for many households.u00a0

It quickly became an essential staple of the diet and even royalty indulged in the tasty beverage.u00a0

Queen Elizabeth I, like most people of the era, consumed it for breakfast and at other times of the day.u00a0

But, by the start of the late 18th century and the Industrial Revolution, new methods of making beer meant women's contribution slowly started to decline and be forgotten, until now.u00a0

According to Peyton, "I know men will be absolutely stunned to find this out, but they have got women to thank for beer."

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