Online Encyclopedia

ALE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 538 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALE  , an old word for a fermented liquor obtained chiefly from

malt . In England " ale " is nowadays practically synonymous with "
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beer." Before the introduction of hops into England from Flanders in the 16th century ale was the name exclusively applied to malt liquor, the
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term beer being gradually introduced to describe liquor brewed with an infusion of hops . This distinction does not apply at the
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present time, except in so far as the term ale is not applied to black beers (stout and porter) nor to lager beer . In the
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United States, however, it is customary to confine the designation beer to the article obtained by the bottom
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fermentation
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process . In former times the Welsh and Scots had two distinct kinds of ale, called
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common and spiced ales, the relative values of which were appraised by law in the following terms: " If a farmer have no mead, he shalhpay two casks of spiced ale, or four casks of common ale, for one cask of mead." There are numerous varieties of
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English ales, such as mild ale, which is a full, sweetish beer, of a dark colour and with relatively little hop; pale ale, which is relatively dry, of
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light colour and of a more pronounced hop flavour than the mild ale; and bitter and stock ales, the latter term being generally reserved for
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superior beers, such as are used for bottling . The terms pale, bitter, stock, light, &c., are to be regarded as trade distinctions and not as exact
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definitions of quality or type . (See BEER and
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BREWING.) Parish Ales.—In old England an " ale " was synonymous with a parish festival or merry-making at which ale was the chief drink . The word was generally used in composition . Thus there were leet-ales (that held on leet or manorial court day); lamb-ales (that held at lamb-shearing); Whitsun-ales, clerk-ales, church-ales and so on . The word bridal is really bride-ale, the
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wedding feast . Bid-ales, once very common throughout England, were " benefit " feasts to which a general invitation was given, and all the neighbours attending were expected to make some contribution to help the
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object of the "benefit." (See "Bidding-Weddings" under BRIDE.) These parish festivals were of much ecclesiastical and social importance in
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medieval England . The chief purpose of church-ales and clerk-ales, at least, was to facilitate the collection of parish-dues, or to make an actual profit for the church from the sale of the liquor by the church wardens .

These profits kept the parish church in repair, or were distributed as

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alms to the poor . At Sygate, Norfolk, on the gallery of the church.is inscribed
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God speed the plough And give us good ale enow . Be merry and glade, With good ale was this
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work made . On the beam of a screen in the church of Thorpe-le-Soken, Essex, is the following inscription in raised
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Gothic letters, on a
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scroll held by two angels—" This cost is the bachelers made by ales thesn be ther med." The date is about 1480 . The feast was usually held in a
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barn near the church or in the churchyard . In Tudor times church-ales were held on Sundays . Gradually the parish-ales were limited to the Whitsun season, and these still have
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local survivals . The colleges of the
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universities used formerly to brew their own ales and hold festivals known as college-ales . Some of these ales are still brewed and famous, like " chancellor " at Queen's College, and " archdeacon " at Merton College, Oxford, and "
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audit ale " at Trinity, Cambridge . See Brand's Popular Antiquities of
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Great Britain (Wm . Carew Hazlitt's edition, 1905) .

End of Article: ALE
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