Summary
Before newspapers spread, coffeehouses accelerated rumor and reports. Merchants, sailors, and writers built a shared “world bulletin” at the same tables.
Around a cup of coffee, you don’t just trade small talk—you can trade history. In eras before newspapers reached every home, coffeehouses became hubs for people hungry for information.\n\nNews traveled as a mouth-to-mouth network. A sailor from the harbor, a merchant from another city, or a local writer would combine, verify, or distort reports in the same room.\n\nSurprising detail: these spaces could also act as political thermometers. How often a rumor repeated across tables was a practical way to sense a city’s mood.\n\nThat’s why a coffeehouse wasn’t only about drinks; it functioned like an ancestor of social media. Even today, “I heard it at a café” carries a cultural echo of that role.