History
Six millennia of brewing — from Neolithic grain beverages and Roman cervisia to monastic ales, Reinheitsgebot and the modern lager revolution.
Explore history →From the monastic abbeys of medieval Belgium to the lager cellars of Bohemia and the brewing courts of Bavaria — discover the heritage, history and museums that tell the story of European beer.
This site is a quiet, non-commercial reference. We collect the threads of European beer history and link them to the museums and heritage sites that preserve them.
Six millennia of brewing — from Neolithic grain beverages and Roman cervisia to monastic ales, Reinheitsgebot and the modern lager revolution.
Explore history →Portraits of nine "beer capitals" — Munich, Prague, Brussels, Dublin, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, London, Bamberg and Vienna.
Discover cities →A reference directory of twelve public beer museums and brewery heritage centres across Europe — with addresses and phone numbers.
Browse museums →How this portal works: non-commercial, no sales, no advertising, no affiliate links. Educational content for adult readers.
Read the policy →The full story is on the history page. Here is a taste of where it begins, where it turns and where it leads.
The earliest European traces of brewing appear in Neolithic Spain, Scotland and the Balkans — fermented grain beverages predating Roman wine culture.
Belgian, German and French monasteries refined brewing as a daily craft. Trappist abbeys still keep this tradition alive today.
Bavaria's "Beer Purity Law" — one of the world's first food regulations — restricted beer to water, barley and hops.
In the Bohemian town of Plzeň, Josef Groll brewed the world's first pale lager — a style that would conquer the globe.
At the Carlsberg Laboratory in Copenhagen, Emil Christian Hansen isolated the first single-cell brewing yeast — transforming beer into a science.
Regional brewing flourishes again. Lambic, Berliner Weisse and traditional cask ale return alongside experimental craft brewers.
Use the museum directory as a starting point. Each entry includes the official address and phone number so you can contact the institution directly.
Open the Museum Directory