The Culture of Old Regime Europe373
open houses for intellectuals, and his daughter,
Dorothea von Schlegel, built on this habit to emulate
the French salons. Most German salons, however,
insisted upon a stricter sexual respectability than char-
acterized Parisian salons.
The coffeehouse served a similar cultural role for
other social strata. Coffeehouses—and sometimes tav-
erns, which were less expensive and less formal—served
as meeting houses, reading rooms, and debating halls.
The daily newspaper was at the center of this phenom-
enon. Dailies were born and began to flourish in the
eighteenth century, starting with the Daily Courantin
London in 1702. Moscow had a newspaper later that
same year, Berlin a daily paper from 1704, and Rome
from 1716. Paris even had a women’s newspaper, advo-
cating the equality of the sexes—Le Journal des dames,
founded in 1759—before it had a daily newspaper.
Larger Sunday newspapers appeared in London in
- Until the technological innovations of the mid-
nineteenth century, however, these newspapers re-
mained expensive and their circulation low. Subscrip-
tion libraries and “reading societies” appeared in the
German states as early as 1704. But the coffeehouse
provided the most popular solution by subscribing to
multiple newspapers, holding public readings of news-
paper stories for the benefit of the illiterate majority,
and providing the sociable setting. The towns and
cities of eighteenth-century Europe were filled with
coffeehouses. The first coffeehouse opened in Paris in
1672 and soon failed; in 1754, however, fifty-six were
flourishing. There were none in London in 1650, but
more than two thousand had opened by 1725. The first
coffeehouse in central Europe opened in Vienna in
1683, after a few sacks of coffee were taken from a re-
treating Turkish army. After the eighteenth-century
boom, the Viennese all but lived in fifteen thousand
coffeehouses. Coffeehouses became so popular in
Berlin that Frederick the Great blocked the importation
of coffee as a drain on the national wealth—a hint at
how expensive coffee was initially.
Illustration 20.3
The Salon of Madame Geoffrin. Marie-Therèse Geoffrin
(1699–1777) was the hostess of one of the most influential salons
of eighteenth-century France. In presiding over such private
meetings of writers, philosophers, artists, and politicians, women
played a central role in the shaping and transmission of the ideas
of the Enlightenment.