Europe '', 17 September 1870, during the
Franco-Prussian War In the 17th century, coffee appeared for the first time in Europe outside the
Ottoman Empire, and coffeehouses were established, soon becoming increasingly popular. The first coffeehouse is said to have appeared in 1632 in
Livorno, Italy, founded by a Jewish merchant, or in 1640, in Venice. In the 19th and 20th centuries in Europe, coffeehouses were very often meeting places for writers and artists.
Austria The traditional tale of the origins of the
Viennese café begins with the mysterious sacks of green beans left behind when the Turks were defeated in the
Battle of Vienna in 1683. All the sacks of coffee were granted to the victorious Polish king,
Jan III Sobieski, who in turn gave them to one of his officers,
Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki (also known as Georg Kolschitzky), a Ukrainian Cossack and Polish diplomat of Ruthenian descent. Kulczycki, according to the tale, then began the first coffeehouse in
Vienna with the hoard, also being the first to serve coffee with milk. However, it is now widely accepted that the first Viennese coffeehouse was actually opened by an Armenian merchant named Johannes Diodato (also known as Johannes Theodat) in 1685. Fifteen years later, four other Armenians owned coffeehouses. The
culture of drinking coffee was itself widespread in the country in the second half of the 18th century. Over time, a
Viennese coffeehouse culture developed. Writers, artists, musicians, intellectuals, bon vivants and their financiers met, and new coffee varieties were served. People played cards or chess, worked, read, thought, composed, discussed, argued, observed and just chatted. Much information was also obtained, because local and foreign newspapers were freely available to all customers. This form of coffeehouse culture spread throughout the
Habsburg Empire in the 19th century. Scientific theories, political plans and artistic projects were worked out and discussed in Viennese coffeehouses all over Central Europe.
James Joyce enjoyed his coffee in a Viennese coffeehouse on the
Adriatic Sea in
Trieste, then and now the main port for coffee and coffee processing in Italy and Central Europe. From there, the Viennese
Kapuziner coffee developed into today's
cappuccino. This special multicultural atmosphere of the Habsburg coffeehouses was largely destroyed by the later Nazism and communism and today can only be found in a few places that have long been in the slipstream of history, such as Vienna or Trieste.
England The first coffeehouse in England was opened on the High Street (on the site of the later Grand Café) in
Oxford in 1650 or 1651 by "Jacob the Jew". A second, competing coffeehouse was opened across the street (on the site of the later
Queen's Lane Coffee House) in 1654, by "Cirques Jobson, the Jew". In
London, the earliest coffeehouse was established by
Pasqua Rosée (described as Greek, Armenian, or Turkish) in 1652.
Anthony Wood observed of the coffeehouses of Oxford in 1674 "The decay of study, and consequently of learning, are coffy houses, to which most scholars retire and spend much of the day in hearing and speaking of news, in speaking vilely of their superiors." Pasqua Rosée was the servant of a trader in goods from the
Ottoman Empire named Daniel Edwards, who imported the coffee and assisted Rosée in setting up the establishment there. From 1670 to 1685, London coffeehouses began to increase in number, and also in political importance due to their popularity as places of debate. For the first several years, London's coffeehouses were the preserve of "a well-educated and commercial elite", but from the 1660s their popularity increased. By 1675, there were more than 3,000 coffeehouses in England; and in London alone there were perhaps 550 at their 18th-century peak. Many men found a coffeehouse a convenient place for doing business, holding consultations there and having mail for them sent there, as well as keeping up with news. The coffeehouses were great social levelers, open to all men and indifferent to social status, and as a result associated with equality and republicanism. Entry gave access to books or print news. The rich intellectual atmosphere of early London coffeehouses was available to anyone who could pay the sometimes one penny entry fee, giving them the name "
penny universities". the public still flocked to them. For several decades following the
Restoration, the wits gathered around
John Dryden at
Will's Coffee House, in
Bow Street (although
Jonathan Swift was unimpressed). By the early 18th century, different coffeehouses attracted different clienteles, divided by occupation or opinion, such as
Tories and
Whigs, wits and
stockjobbers, merchants and lawyers, booksellers and authors, men of fashion or the "cits" of
the City. According to one French visitor,
Abbé Prévost, "You read [in coffeehouses] for two-pence all the papers for or against the administration", and they were "the seats of English liberty". Coffeehouses not only boosted the popularity of print news culture, they also helped the growth of various financial markets including insurance and stocks.
Lloyd's Coffee House was where underwriters of ship insurance met to do business, leading to the establishment of
Lloyd's of London insurance market and other related businesses. By the 1750s, the English consumption of tea had overtaken that of coffee. As tea could be easily prepared at home, newspapers were cheap, and there was a greater variety of places for leisure and entertainment, there was no obvious demand for publicly available teahouses. Later in the century, coffeehouses tended, via pricing and memberships, to cater for only a richer clientele, and "the death of coffee-house culture was assured".
Finland in
Helsinki in 2024 Finland's first coffeehouse, Kaffehus, was founded in
Turku in 1778. The oldest coffeehouse still operating in
Helsinki,
Café Ekberg, was founded in 1852.
France When
Soliman Aga (sent to Versailles in 1669 by Sultan
Mehmed IV) returned home, a member of his retinue, Pascal, remained and sold coffee from a stall at the market of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. He soon thereafter opened a coffeehouse in Paris, on the Quai de l'École near the
Pont Neuf, and others from the Near East rivaled him. But the fad for Turquerie soon ended. "[I]t was not until the establishment of the
Café de Procope in 1689 that coffee found a truly Parisian expression". Owned by the Sicilian Procopio Cutò (François Procope), this was a popular meeting place of the French
Enlightenment; the
Encyclopédie (1751–1772) of
Diderot and
D'Alembert is said to have had its start in conversations there between the two. The issue of slavery had a profound effect on the pre-Revolutionary thinkers who gathered at the Café Procope in Paris, including
Montesquieu,
Rousseau, and Diderot. The ethics of the
slave trade were discussed whilst its very fruits were consumed, a dark liquid produced by dark skins in the depths of dark despair. Diderot wrote that the trade "is a business which violates religion, morality, natural law, and all human rights", whilst Rousseau railed against the supposed right to enslave as "absurd and meaningless". In its decor too, Café Procope had a lasting influence. Procopio had installed wall mirrors, marble-topped tables, and more that he had had removed from a bath-house that he had bought, thereby establishing what has become a convention for many other European cafés.
Ireland In the 18th century,
Dublin coffeehouses functioned as early reading centers and the emergence of circulation and subscription libraries that provided greater access to printed material for the public. The connection of the coffeehouse with virtually every aspect of the print trade was evidenced by the incorporation of printing, publishing, selling, and viewing of newspapers, pamphlets and books on the premises, most notably for
Dick's Coffee House, owned by
Richard Pue; thus contributing to a culture of reading and increased literacy. The concept was popular: On [Piazza San Marco] alone in the eighteenth century there were, under the Procuratie Vecchie, the following cafés: the
Re di Francia, the
Abbondanza, ''Pitt l'eroe
, the Regina d'Ungheria
, the Orfeo
, the Redentore
, the Coraggio
, the Speranza
, the Arco Celeste
and Quadri opened in 1775 by Giorgio Quadri of Corfù, who was the first to serve genuine Turkish coffee. Under the Procuratie Nuove were the Angelo Custode
, the Duca di Toscana
, the Buon genio
, the Doge
, the Imperatore
, the Imperatrice della Russia
, the Tamerlano
, the Fontana di Diana
, the Dame Venete
, the Aurora
, the Piante d'oro
, the Arabo
, the Piastrelle
, the Pace
, the Venezia trionfante
, and Florian'', opened in 1720 by Floriano Francesconi. During the 18th century, the oldest extant coffeehouses in Italy were established. Venice aside, these included
Antico Caffè Greco (circa 1760) in
Rome,
Caffè Pedrocchi in
Padua,
Caffè dell'Ussero in
Pisa, and
Caffè Fiorio in
Turin.
Netherlands Coffeehouses (koffiehuizen) emerged in the
Dutch Republic in the mid-17th century following the introduction of coffee through expanding trade networks with the
Middle East and the
Ottoman Empire. The earliest documented references to coffee-related establishments in the Netherlands date to the early 1660s, particularly in Amsterdam. One of the earliest known coffeehouses in the country is recorded in The Hague, where a coffeehouse reportedly opened on the Korte Voorhout in 1664. At this time, coffee was a luxury commodity, primarily consumed by wealthier groups, while traditional beverages such as beer remained dominant. By the late 17th century, coffeehouses had become established in major Dutch cities, including Amsterdam, where contemporary sources indicate the presence of multiple coffee sellers and dedicated establishments. These venues also functioned as social spaces for conversation, gaming, and the exchange of news and information. Coffeehouses in the Dutch Republic formed part of a broader European development in which such establishments contributed to urban sociability and the circulation of public discourse.
Portugal of
Fernando Pessoa by Lagoa Henriques, next to the
A Brasileira café, in
Chiado, Lisbon The history of coffee in
Portugal is usually said to have begun during the reign of king
John V, when Portuguese agent Francisco de Melo Palheta supposedly managed to steal coffee beans from French Guiana and introduce it to Brazil. From Brazil, coffee was taken to
Cape Verde and
São Tomé and Príncipe, which were also Portuguese colonies at the time. Despite this story, coffee already existed in
Angola, having been introduced by
Portuguese missionaries. During the 18th century, the first public
cafés appeared, inspired by French gatherings from the 17th century, becoming spaces for cultural and artistic entertainment. Several cafés emerged in
Lisbon such as:
Martinho da Arcada (the oldest café still operating, having opened in 1782),
Café Tavares, and
Botequim Parras. Of these, several became famous for harboring poets and artists, such as
Manuel du Bocage with his visits to
Café Nicola, opened in 1796 by the Italian Nicola Breteiro; and
Fernando Pessoa with his visits to
A Brasileira, opened in 1905 by Adriano Teles. The most famous was the
Café Marrare, opened by the Neapolitan Antonio Marrare, in 1820, and frequently visited by Júlio Castilho, Raimundo de Bulhão Pato,
Almeida Garrett,
Alexandre Herculano and other members of the Portuguese government and the
intelligentsia. It began its saying:
Lisboa era Chiado, o Chiado era o Marrare e o Marrare ditava a lei (English: 'Lisbon was the Chiado, the Chiado was the Marrare and the Marrare dictated the law'). Other coffeehouses soon opened across the country, such as
Café Vianna, opened in
Braga, in 1858, by Manoel José da Costa Vianna, and visited by important Portuguese writers such as
Camilo Castelo Branco and
Eça de Queirós. During the 1930s, a surge in coffeehouses happened in
Porto with the opening of several that still exist, such as
Café Guarany, opened in 1933, and
A Regaleira, opened in 1934.
Romania In 1667, Kara Hamie, a former Ottoman
Janissary from
Constantinople, opened the first coffee shop in the center of
Bucharest (then the capital of the
Principality of Wallachia). On its site today stands the main building of the
National Bank of Romania.
Switzerland In 1761 the , a shop for exported goods, was opened in
St. Gallen.
Gender in a canopied booth, from which she serves coffee in tall cups. The exclusion of women from coffeehouses as guests was not universal, but does appear to have been common in Europe. In Germany, women frequented them, but in England and France they were banned in the mid-17th century.
Émilie du Châtelet reportedly
cross-dressed to gain entrance to the Café Gradot, in
Paris. Women did work as waitresses at coffeehouses and also owned and managed coffeehouses. Well-known women in the coffeehouse business were
Moll King in England and
Maja-Lisa Borgman in Sweden.
The Americas Argentina is a café in Buenos Aires frequented by
Jorge Luis Borges among other public figures. Coffeehouses are part of the culture of
Buenos Aires and the customs of its inhabitants. They are traditional meeting places for
porteños and have inspired innumerable artistic creations. Some notable coffeehouses include
Confitería del Molino,
Café Tortoni,
El Gato Negro, and
Café La Biela.
United States on
MacDougal Street in Manhattan, founded in 1927 The first coffeehouse in the United States opened in
Boston, in 1676. However, Americans did not start choosing coffee over tea until the
Boston Tea Party and the
Revolutionary War. After the Revolutionary War, Americans briefly went back to drinking tea until after the
War of 1812 when they began importing high-quality coffee from Latin America and expensive inferior-quality tea from American shippers instead of Great Britain. Whether they were drinking coffee or tea, coffeehouses, like those in Great Britain, were places where business was done. In the 1780s, Merchant's Coffee House on Wall Street in New York City was home to the organization of the
Bank of New York and the
New York Chamber of Commerce. Coffeehouses in the United States arose from the
espresso- and pastry-centered Italian coffeehouses of the Italian American immigrant communities in the major U.S. cities, notably
New York City's
Little Italy and
Greenwich Village, Boston's
North End, and San Francisco's
North Beach. From the late 1950s onward, coffeehouses also hosted entertainment, most commonly
folk performers during the
American folk music revival. Both Greenwich Village and North Beach became major haunts of the
Beats, who were highly identified with these coffeehouses. As the youth culture of the 1960s evolved, non-Italians consciously copied these coffeehouses. The political nature of much of 1960s folk music made the music a natural tie-in with coffeehouses with their association with political action. A number of well-known performers like
Joan Baez and
Bob Dylan began their careers performing in coffeehouses.
Blues singer
Lightnin' Hopkins bemoaned his woman's overindulgence in coffeehouse socializing in his 1969 song "Coffeehouse Blues". with a drive-through In 1966,
Alfred Peet began applying the dark roast style to high quality beans and opened up a small shop in
Berkeley, California to educate customers on the virtues of good coffee. In the 21st century, North American usage has increasingly distinguished between the terms "coffee shop" and "café" based on their operational models and revenue streams. While often used interchangeably in casual speech, a
coffee shop is typically characterized by a focus on "
extraction" (beverages),
counter service, and high-volume throughput. In contrast, a
café often functions as a hybrid between a restaurant and a traditional coffeehouse, prioritizing seated dining and a higher average transaction value. This distinction is further defined by physical infrastructure; cafés often require full commercial kitchen licensing, including
grease traps and high-capacity
ventilation for meal preparation, whereas coffee shops frequently operate under "light food" licenses that prioritize
the espresso machine as the central focal point of the space. From the 1960s through the mid-1980s, churches and individuals in the United States used the coffeehouse concept for outreach. They were often storefronts and had names like
The Lost Coin (
Greenwich Village),
The Gathering Place (
Riverside, CA),
Catacomb Chapel (New York City), and
Jesus for You (
Buffalo, NY). Christian music (often guitar-based) was performed, coffee and food provided, and
Bible studies convened as people of varying backgrounds gathered in a casual setting that was purposefully different from traditional churches. == Contemporary history ==