The history of coffee — Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic 2018 TEST 4 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 13 Academic 2018 TEST 4

The history of coffee

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(0:00) You will hear part of a presentation by a history student about the history of coffee. (0:10) First, you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. (1:04) Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.

(1:12) In my presentation, I'm going to talk about coffee and its importance both in economic and social terms. (1:20) We think it was first drunk in the Arab world, but there's hardly any documentary evidence of it before the 1500s, (1:29) although of course that doesn't mean that people didn't know about it before then. (1:35) However, there is evidence that coffee was originally gathered from bushes growing wild in Ethiopia, in the northeast of Africa.

(1:44) In the early 16th century, it was being bought by traders, and gradually its use as a drink spread throughout the Middle East. (1:55) It's also known that in 1522, in the Turkish city of Constantinople, which was the centre of the Ottoman Empire, (2:04) the court physician approved its use as a medicine. (2:08) By the mid-1500s, coffee bushes were being cultivated in the Yemen, (2:14) and for the next hundred years, this region produced most of the coffee drunk in Africa and the Arab world.

(2:23) What's particularly interesting about coffee is its effect on social life. (2:28) It was rarely drunk at home, but instead people went to coffee houses to drink it. (2:34) These people, usually men, would meet to drink coffee and chat about issues of the day.

(2:42) But at the time, this chance to share ideas and opinions was seen as something that was potentially dangerous, (2:50) and in 1623, the ruler of Constantinople demanded the destruction of all the coffee houses in the city, (2:58) although after his death, many new ones opened and coffee consumption continued. (3:06) In the 17th century, coffee drinking spread to Europe, and here too, coffee shops became places where ordinary people, (3:15) nearly always men, could meet to exchange ideas. (3:20) Because of this, some people said that these places performed a similar function to universities.

(3:26) The opportunity they provided for people to meet together outside their own homes (3:32) and to discuss the topics of the day had an enormous impact on social life, (3:38) and many social movements and political developments had their origins in coffee house discussions. (3:49) In the late 1600s, the Yemeni monopoly on coffee production broke down, (3:55) and coffee production started to spread around the world, helped by European colonisation. (4:02) Europeans set up coffee plantations in Indonesia and the Caribbean, and production of coffee in the colonies skyrocketed.

(4:11) Different types of coffee were produced in different areas, (4:15) and it's interesting that the names given to these different types, like mocha or java coffee, (4:21) were often taken from the port they were shipped to Europe from. (4:26) But if you look at the labour system in the different colonies, there were some significant differences. (4:33) In Brazil and the various Caribbean colonies, coffee was grown in huge plantations, (4:40) and the workers there were almost all slaves.

(4:44) But this wasn't the same in all colonies, for example in Java, which had been colonised by the Dutch, (4:50) the peasants grew coffee and passed a proportion of this on to the Dutch, so it was used as a means of taxation. (4:59) But whatever system was used, under the European powers of the 18th century, (5:05) coffee production was very closely linked to colonisation. (5:10) Coffee was grown in ever-increasing quantities to satisfy the growing demand from Europe, (5:16) and it became nearly as important as sugar production, which was grown under very similar conditions.

(5:24) However, coffee prices were not yet low enough for people to drink it regularly at home, (5:29) so most coffee consumptions still took place in public coffee houses, (5:34) and it still remained something of a luxury item. (5:38) In Britain, however, a new drink was introduced from China, (5:41) and started to become popular, gradually taking over from coffee, (5:46) although at first it was so expensive that only the upper classes could afford it. (5:52) This was tea, and by the late 1700s it was being widely drunk.

(5:58) However, when the USA gained independence from Britain in 1776, (6:03) they identified this drink with Britain, and coffee remained the preferred drink in the USA, as it still is today. (6:12) So, by the early 19th century, coffee was already being widely produced and consumed. (6:20) But during this century, production boomed, and coffee prices started to fall.

(6:26) This was partly because new types of transportation had been developed which were cheaper and more efficient. (6:32) So now, working people could afford to buy coffee. It wasn't just a drink for the middle classes.

(6:40) And this was at a time when large parts of Europe were starting to work in industries, (6:46) and sometimes this meant their work didn't stop when it got dark. (6:50) They might have to continue throughout the night. (6:53) So the use of coffee as a stimulant became important.

(6:57) It wasn't just a drink people drank in the morning for breakfast. (7:01) There were also changes in cultivation. (7:08) That is the end of section 4. (7:12) You now have half a minute to check your answers.

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