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  2. Coffee table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_table

    Later coffee tables were designed as low tables, and this idea may have come from the Ottoman Empire, based on the tables in use in tea gardens. As the Anglo-Japanese style was popular in Britain throughout the 1870s and 1880s, [ 5 ] and low tables were common in Japan , this seems to be an equally likely source for the concept of a long low table.

  3. History of coffee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_coffee

    After several years coffee was planted on Indonesia Archipelago. Many coffee specialties are from the Indonesian Archipelago. The colloquial name for coffee, Java, comes from the time when most of Europe and America's coffee was grown in Java. Today Indonesia is one of the largest coffee producers in the world, mainly for export.

  4. Melitta Bentz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melitta_Bentz

    A Melitta coffee filter. Amalie Auguste Melitta Bentz (née Amalie Auguste Melitta Liebscher), best known as Melitta Bentz (January 31, 1873 – June 29, 1950), was a German inventor and entrepreneur known for revolutionizing the process of coffee brewing with her innovation of the coffee filter.

  5. International Women’s Day: 11 essential items that were ...

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    On International Women’s Day, here’s a look at some of the most important inventions created by women

  6. 20 things you didn't know were invented by women - AOL

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  7. English coffeehouses in the 17th and 18th centuries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_coffeehouses_in...

    Women's Petition Against Coffee, 1674. The Mens Answer to the Womens Petition Against Coffee, 1674. Historians disagree on the role and participation of women within the English coffeehouse. Bramah states that women were forbidden from partaking in coffeehouse activity as customers. [72]

  8. Viennese coffee house culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viennese_coffee_house_culture

    Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Leon Trotsky and Josip Broz Tito were all living in Vienna in 1913, and they were constant coffee house patrons. In the 1950s, the period of "coffee house death" began, as many famous Viennese coffee houses had to close. This was due to the popularity of television and the appearance of modern espresso bars.

  9. Ottoman coffeehouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_coffeehouse

    Western European coffeehouses were also "masculine spaces", but women would sometimes go to coffeehouses despite social conventions, because no formal rules prohibited their attendance. Though women's participation in coffeehouse culture was not socially acceptable at first, it gradually became more acceptable in Western Europe throughout the ...