The origin of gin
Juniper has been used since the 13th century for the treatment of metabolic diseases. In times of the plague, the herb was used to fumigate rooms. After the plague, alcohol was produced mainly for pleasure purposes. Since grain was more readily available than wine and could be distilled from the 16th century onward, a Europe-wide culture of brandy production developed. The subsequent addition of juniper to grain spirits laid the foundation for Dutch genever. The Spanish-Dutch War also brought gin to the English, who were fighting on the Dutch front. They copied it and developed it further.
But already in ancient times, scented water and medicinal potions were distilled and this knowledge has been developed in different ways over the centuries in different cultural areas. It is not for nothing that you can buy these many varieties of gin today. However, it was not until the early Middle Ages that important advances were made that allowed alcohol to be produced in the way we know it. This breakthrough occurred in the Persian-Oriental region. The first medical experiments combining alcohol with juniper can be traced back to the year 1000 AD. In the early modern period, thanks not least to the physician Francis de la Boë, also known as the "forefather of gin," alcoholic potions very similar to gin appeared on the market. Francis de la Boë developed these potions under the name Genever as a remedy for stomach ailments. Today, however, when you buy gin, you do so for the sake of enjoyment. This was also the case with his patients, who liked the liquor so much that they preferred to think of it as a stimulant rather than a remedy. This led to the fact that the Genever was officially offered in the Netherlands as Wacholderschnaps. As already mentioned, the English came into contact with jenever during the Spanish-Dutch War. However, it was not until 1689, when William of Orange-Nassau ascended the English throne, that juniper brandy gained great popularity in England, where it soon became known as gin and people could buy it as gin. Since then, it was impossible to imagine society without gin. You too can go on a discovery tour with our range of English gins.