Ancient Drinking Appurtenances
Alcoholic beverage was the earliest liquid refreshment created by humankind.
In the thousands of years that have since elapsed, the countless ceremonial and
everyday use sets of cups, goblets, and decanters that were produced
specifically to contain and convey wine and liquor have now become important
historical artifacts.
Neolithic Drinking Implements
In 1979, at the Dawenkou tombs in Juxian County, Shandong
Province, Chinese archaeologists unearthed pottery vessels that date back 4,000
years. They included a large pottery zun used for fermentation, straining jars
for filtering, pottery vats for storage, and over 100 drinking vessels of
various types. The archaeologists concluded that the occupant of the tomb was a
professional wine maker.
These are not, however, the earliest drinking vessels ever found. Among
excavated pottery vessels dating back 5,000 to 6,000 years are wine vats, albeit
empty. It is not known whether or not the drink they originally contained
evaporated or seeped out. To this day, the origins of recreational alcohol are
uncertain.
Bronze from the Shang
Dynasty
There are various theories as to the origins of wine making. One is that it
began with apes, when the fruit they stored in their cave dwellings fermented
naturally and produced wine. Humankind was thereafter inspired to formulate more
refined methods. Another theory concerns a man name Yi Di, who is believed to
have lived during the reign of Yu the Great, in the late 23rd century B.C. He is
said to have invented wine at the behest of Yu's daughter, in order that she
might present it to her father as a gift.
Drink, and its volatile effects, perplexed the ancients. It was sometimes
used as a sacrament in the worship of ancestors and deities, but was also
associated with disaster, and therefore prohibited.
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