http://victoriavandal.livejournal.com/ (
victoriavandal.livejournal.com) wrote in
revolution_fr2008-10-14 10:39 am
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
Comité de Salut Public drinks bill...?
I heard a reference to the Committee of Public Safety's drinks bill on a radio programme a couple of years ago, but I've never come across a written reference to it. Does such a thing exist, or was it a post-Thermidor 'hey, don't blame us, we were drunk all the time' excuse? I've also heard similar about the Tribunal, but again haven't found a reliable, non-anecdotal, non-hostile source.
I'm also aware that the average alcohol intake was universally far higher from the dawn of time until the 19thc - it was safer than water!
On a related issue, does anyone know if the opiate laudanum was used/abused in France as much as it was in Britain at the time? I don't know how greatly the trade links would have made a difference here. I can't remember ever having come across a reference in anything on the Revolution - the Romantic poets in Britain in the 1790's were living on the stuff - but I did wonder if that, rather than the usually assumed bisexuality, may have been Camille Desmoulins' 'vice'?
I'm also aware that the average alcohol intake was universally far higher from the dawn of time until the 19thc - it was safer than water!
On a related issue, does anyone know if the opiate laudanum was used/abused in France as much as it was in Britain at the time? I don't know how greatly the trade links would have made a difference here. I can't remember ever having come across a reference in anything on the Revolution - the Romantic poets in Britain in the 1790's were living on the stuff - but I did wonder if that, rather than the usually assumed bisexuality, may have been Camille Desmoulins' 'vice'?
no subject
The footnote reads (translated by myself):
"On this date, the following bill is found in the account book:
Milk and cream.................. 14 s[ous].
Two loaves of bread............. 24 s.
Vegetables...................... 6
Salad........................... 10
Oil............................. 2
Vinegar......................... 12
Pepper.......................... 5
Cheese.......................... 1
Cider........................... 18
One fatted chicken (poularde)... 8 10
And the note:
Robespierre and Robert Lindet dined."
Considering the wages of a worker in this period, it's easy to see where the problem would lie, but I believe that for the bourgeoisie this would be a standard, even modest meal.
no subject
The TV food programme I mentioned earlier had a good bit when they cooked a meal out of a 1660' Restoration era Royalist 'joke' cookbook called something like 'Mrs. Cromwell's cookbook': the aristocrat meals the presenters ate for the rest of the programme were all meat and stodge - the Puritan meal actually had vegetables and was the only meal the presenters enjoyed! Everything else - especially the 'Prince Regent's breakfast' in one episode (more meat than most people would see in a month)- looked lethal.
no subject
That doesn't surprise me either. The amount of meat the aristocracy ate is really just plain disgusting.