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From the earliest times humans have used and traded in sugar. Egyptian
hieroglyphics dating back at least 3,000 years indicate that the
art of sugar confectionery was already established.(1)
This early form of sugar was in the form of honey.
Sugar in the form of a grass, was originally used by the natives
of New Guinea for thatching the roofs of their huts. They
discovered its sweet taste and started planting the sweetest for
food. This desire for sweetness came from our hunter gatherer
forebears who needed a very high calorie diet because of the
amount of energy expended in their daily life. This also applied
to a taste for salt.
The knowledge of the sweet grass spread, travellers, sailors and
merchants carried it into Polynesia and Asia. Later the Arabs
improved the strain and started growing it in North Africa.
This may have been due to Alexander the Great (356-232 BC)
introducing sugar cane to the Mediterranean countries, from whence
it spread down the east coast of Africa. It was grown largely in
Spain and the Canary Islands, and the Crusaders took a part in
introducing it to Europe and England.
It became an important commodity not only because of demand for
it, but because it was taxed. But demand outpaced supply, and King
Henry III of England had difficulty in obtaining as much as 3lbs
for a banquet in 1226. However, from 1685 until 1874 its use did
not become widespread. For instance, individual yearly consumption
in Britain in 1800 was estimated as 10kg/22lb per person. In 1985
the estimate was 50kg/110 lb. per person.(2)
Crusaders had developed plantations in Mediterranean countries,
and used slaves for cheap labour. But through destruction of trees
through using them for fuel to process the sugar cane, the sugar
trade in the Mediterranean collapsed. The production and slave
trade was then carried to the Caribbean, creating a hell for the
black slaves.
It was the demand for sugar that was a powerful stimulus to the
black slave trade. The Encyclopedia Britannica suggests that
during the whole of the eighteenth century it was also the direct
or indirect cause of many an Anglo-French naval battle in the
Caribbean. The fact that sugar was taxed, also made it an
economically important commodity.
Although old records show that raw sugar cane was being milled
in Dublin and Belfast in the middle of the seventeenth century,(3)
in general Britains connection with sugar cane was linked
irrevocably with black slavery. However, slavery was not a
practice started by white Europeans. It had existed throughout
history and in most cultures. In the Americas the Spanish started
importing African slaves in 1517. They had originally forced the
local native people to work in the mines and fields as slaves, but
these easily contracted European diseases and died. The first
slaves to be used in an English colony arrived at Virginia in
1619.
During the nineteenth century Britains relationship with
the growth and economic factors relating to sugar became complex.
Several changes have arisen in understanding this period. For
instance there were two viewpoints about the period. One was that
humanitarian ideology triumphed in connection with the use of
slave labour, and this undermined the production of sugar cane.
Another viewpoint was that slavery became economically unsound,
and it was this that really undermined continued use of slave
labour. However, recent information suggests that the situation
was less simple. To paraphrase Alison Grant, more emphasis has in
recent years been given to the social complexities of
humanitarianism, and also, the British West Indian slavery has
come to appear more resilient and flexible as an economic
institution than was stated by other authors such as Williams. (4)
(5)
Another factor was that the cultivation of sugar beet became
more extensive in this period, possibly escalated by the conflicts
between Britain and other European countries. When Nelson was
victorious at Trafalgar in 1805, a blockade followed, cutting off
supplies of cane sugar to continental Europe. Napoleon had heard
that a new technique had been developed for extracting sugar from
beet. He therefore decided that sugar beet should be the source of
sugar for Europe. This meant that sugar cane and sugar beet were
developed in parallel, and often in a competitive manner. Some
idea of this is gained from statistics on sugar production. In the
1830's, for instance, when the world population was 1,000 million,
recorded sugar production was 800,000 tonnes a year.(6)
This was virtually all from sugar cane. But by the mid 1970s,
when the world population had reached over 4000 million, sugar
production was recorded as 80,000,000 tonnes. The comparison
between beet and cane is now that presently there are
approximately 22.25 million acres of sugar beet grown throughout
the world, and 32 million acres of cane.(7)
Britains blockade of French ports is thought to have been
the stimulus behind Napoleons order for large areas of land
to be given over to sugar beet cultivation. He also directed
French scientists to work on the problem of refining the raw beet
sugars into something usable in the household. Benjamin Delessert,
a French researcher, was the first to arrive at a usable solution.
On January 2nd 1812 Napoleon went to the village of Passay to
congratulate Delessert and see for himself. The French newspaper
Moniteur Universal reported Napoleon as saying, A
great revolution in the economy of France has started today!
(8)
Sugar in its various forms, was therefore interwoven into the
various aspects of society in very powerful ways. Some of the most
obvious of these are that it was a commodity which became of
increasing economic value; its economic fluctuations and
possibilities both created and possibly destroyed the black slave
trade; it was a major nutritional component of British diet, the
molasses being rich in iron and some of the B vitamins and of
course an energy food; its social influence stimulated not only a
change in diet and cooking in Britain, but also powerful
anti-slave movements; it was a factor in politics and
international conflict; not only in connection with the growing of
beet, but also in the development of milling processes, sugar was
a part of the technological and agricultural changes in the 19th
C.
Therefore, to summarise, the history of sugar in the 19th C. is
an example of how a commodity that is largely to do with the
kitchen, although sitting quietly on a kitchen table, is linked
with major political, social, technological and economic events.
The growing demand for sugar preceding and during the 19th C.
gradually injected it with more power and effectiveness in human
affairs. It is, of course, still potently connected with
international economics, and the quality of life for thousands of
workers in the industry.
Bibliography
Alison Grant, Bristol and the Sugar Trade. London:
Longman, 1981.
Belinda Coote. The Hunger Crop - Poverty and the Sugar
Industry. Oxfam. 1987.
Encyclopedia Britannica on CD ROM.
Infopedia UK Ltd. Hutchinson New Century Encyclopedia on
CD ROM.
Notes
(1) Encyclopedia Britannica. CD ROM version.
Search for sugar history.
(2) Infopedia UK Ltd. CD ROM. Search for sugar.
(3) Encyclopedia Britannica. CD ROM version.
Search for sugar history
(4) Alison Grant, Bristol and the Sugar
Trade.
(5)Eric Williams. Capitalism and Slavery
1944.
(6) Encyclopedia Britannica. CD ROM version.
Search for sugar history
(7) Infopedia UK Ltd. CD ROM. Search for sugar
(8)Belinda Coote`. The Hunger Crop. Page
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