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  1. Water in the Middle Ages was polluted, full of bacteria and, frankly, not fit to drink. This forced everyone -- from commoners to royalty -- to hydrate by way of beer. Except that they didn't. The idea that people primarily drank beer throughout the Middle Ages is widespread -- and also wrong.

  2. Presumably, those in the East relied on boiling water, while those in the West relied on alcohol. In the context of contaminated water supply, ethyl alcohol may indeed have been mother’s milk to a nascent Western civilization. Beer and wine were free of pathogens.

  3. Jul 24, 2015 · Dating from the taming and conscious application of the fermentation process, people of all ages in the West have therefore consumed beer and wine, not water, as their major daily thirst quenchers. So, yes, people drank beer or wine because drinking the water often made them ill.

  4. Sep 12, 2013 · Bitters themselves date from the 18th century, a time when we didn't have medicine as we know it today. The water supply was unsafe to drink. It was not until the 20th century that we had potable, filtered water, so we drank alcohol as a substitute for water.

  5. Jan 5, 2014 · In the medieval ages, peasants used to drink beer instead of water because the plain water wasn't safe to drink. Why do people in countries where the water sources are polluted not do this today? Why did this practice emerge in some countries but not others?

  6. Apr 29, 2021 · With more contemporary references to wine, ale and beer drinking than to water it would be easy to see how the 'dirty water' idea might take hold. But people in the Mediæval period did drink water and, because it was such a normal and mundane thing to do, they, like us, simply did not boast about it.

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  8. Mar 20, 2013 · The researchers conclude that recovering from a state of dehydration is effectively the same whether you’re rehydrating with water, or a beverage containing up to 2% alcohol — though drinks ...