Rainbow Coffee House

The Rainbow Coffee House was a famous coffee house located in London's Fleet Street.

It was opened by James Farr in 1657, becoming London's second coffee house.[1]

The Rainbow provided a meeting place for freemasons and French refugee Huguenots who established an information centre there.[2]

The Rainbow was also featured in the furor created by Titus Oates. He accused Sir Philip Lloyd of denying the existence of a popish plot there, finding witnesses from amongst the coffee drinkers to testify against him[3]

In 1719 John Woodward wrote a satire The Two Sosias: Or, the True Dr. Byfield at the Rainbow Coffee-House, to the Pretender in Jermyn-Street

Notable people associated with the Rainbow Coffee House

Many notable Huguenots were associated with the Rainbow Coffee House. However, there were also other German and English notable people.[4]

French exiles

Others

References

  1. J J O'Connor, & Robertson, E F. "London Coffee houses and mathematics". Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  2. Koselleck, Reinhart (1988). Critique and Crisis. Oxford: Berg. p. 64. ISBN 085496 535 1.
  3. Shelley, Henry C. "Coffee-houses of old London". Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  4. Dunan-Page, Anne (2006). The Religious Culture of the Huguenots, 1660-1750. Ashgate. p. 166.

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