In the summer of 1812, following
Napoleon's invasion of Russia, the tsar issued a decree banning the import of
French wines in bottles. This was a deliberate affront to Napoleon's patronage of Champagne since the only feasible way to transport the
sparkling wine was in the bottles as storage in
barrels would cause the wine to lose all
effervescence. In an attempt to circumvent the ban, Bohne registered Veuve Clicquot as a
coffee merchant and began smuggling in small quantities of bottles of champagne in barrels of coffee beans. Following the Prussian occupation of
Reims, Louis Bohne and Barbe-Nicole Clicquot worked out a scheme to smuggle a large quantity of Veuve Clicquot's 1811 vintage
Cuvée de la Comète. While the Widow (
Veuve in French) Clicquot distracted the stationed soldiers by opening up her cellars with all the champagne they could drink, Bohne coordinated the loading of a Dutch merchant vessel docked at
Rouen with more than ten thousand bottles. Upon arrival in
Königsberg, Bohne's shipment was met with eager enthusiasm by the Russian elite, with even the tsar himself making a visit. Soon the ban was lifted and a second shipment of this famous wine was quickly sent to
Saint Petersburg. The first-to-market success of this venture firmly established Veuve Clicquot's stature as Russia became the second largest consumer of Champagne in the world. == See also ==