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It's funny the things you stumble across. Yesterday (for reasons I'm not going to explain here) I was searching for "Anton Dreher" in Google books. It threw up some fascinating material.

An overview of the Viennese brewing industry in the 1890's was one. It highlighted a point often misunderstood. That the brewery which transformed the industry in Austria-Hungary wasn't Burgerbräu in Pilsen, but Dreher's brewery in Klein Schwechat on the outskirts of Vienna.

In a report on the World Exhibition I found this lovely table of beer tax receipts in various countries. Take a look:


Receipts form Beer Tax in 1867
country in Austrian guilders in original currency currency unit
UK
58,781,305
5,309,112
pounds Sterling
Austria
16,098,918
16,098,918
Austrian guilders
France
6,400,000
16,000,000
Francs
Belgium
5,822,035
14,535,000
Francs
Bavaria
2,620,450
8,500,000
southern guilders
Prussia
7,310,000
1,746,967
Thalers
Saxony
375,000
150,000
Thalers
USA
3,045,000
1,600,000
US dollars
Württemberg
1,290,000
1,500,000
southern guilders
Hannover
66,000
44,000
Thalers
Holland
433,500
510,000
Dutch guilders
Source:
“Bericht über der Welt_Ausstellung zu Paris im Jahre 1867, volume 7”, 1868, page 112.

That was educational. At least for me. I'd never realised that Württemberg and Bavaria used the same currency before unification. Or that a dollar was worth almost two Austrian guilders. Information that will be dead handy when I finally get my time machine fired up.

Unsurprisingly, it was Britain that generated the most tax income from beer. It had the biggest and most modern brewing industry in the world. And a large, relatively well-off, population of thirsty workers.

Bavaria, Prussia, Saxony, Württemberg and Hannover. That's five Germanies I've covered today. I'm really maintaining my theme this month. Hurray fior me.


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