The Coffee conquest Europe
In 1615, the Venetian traders sent the first sacks of coffee to Western Europe. Its delicious aroma and the stimulating effects established as quickly as a favored drink, and soon there were coffee shops throughout Europe. With her thoughts focused on the business, the bourgeoisie had only praise for the coffee, as their effects became the drunkards in reliable workers. The Dutch and British sailors plant exported to its colonies around the world.
When the Turks were forced to break the siege that were on the outskirts of the city of Vienna in 1683, left over 500 sacks of coffee. A businessman Polish entrepreneur used it to open the first coffee shop in the city.
The extension of the drink was accompanied by the growth of the cultivation of coffee plantations. Already at the end of XVII century, made many efforts to grow the coffee in the greenhouses and that energy investment was successful. It sent one of these plants to King Louis XIV in Paris, as a gift in 1714. It is believed that this plant has been the ancestor of millions of coffee.