In April 1911, thousands of desperate French vineyard workers transformed the wealthy Champagne village of Aÿ into a war zone, pouring twenty million quarts of wine into the streets and burning the great merchant houses to their foundations. This meticulously researched history reveals how ecological catastrophe, systematic fraud, and governmental betrayal drove growers to violent rebellion that would reshape global agriculture forever.
The Champagne Riots emerged from a perfect storm of crisis: the phylloxera louse had devastated vineyards, forcing growers into crushing debt to replant. Champagne houses responded by importing fraudulent wine from southern France while manipulating political processes to exclude entire regions from protection. When growers in the Aube department discovered they had invested everything to replant vineyards that would be legally declared inferior by administrative decree, rage overwhelmed restraint.
This book traces the nearly two-decade struggle from the fires of 1911 through World War One to the final resolution in 1927, and ultimately to the creation of France's Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée system in 1935. The violent uprising of impoverished agricultural workers forced the creation of legal frameworks protecting geographical origin that now govern hundreds of products worldwide, from Parmigiano-Reggiano to Darjeeling tea, demonstrating how collective resistance can transform exploitation into institutionalized justice.
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