The exact location of
origin of citrus fruits is not clearly identified, although most researchers
place it in South-East Asia , at least 4000
years BC. There are actually different legends about the origin of citrus. The
spread of citrus fruits from Asia to Europe
was slow. First, citrus fruits were taken to North Africa and then, probably by
the fall of the Roman Empire , they entered the
South of Europe, where they flourished in the middle Ages. Citrus fruits were
brought to America by the
Spaniards (Columbus took seeds of citrus fruits
with him in his second trip) and the Portuguese in their exploration trips to
the New World , around year 1500. It is
believed that the word “orange” originates from Sanskrit.
International trade in fresh citrus fruits began almost
two centuries ago. Even at its early stages, Spain
played a dominant position in the Mediterranean area, supplying almost all
citrus fruits shipped to United Kingdom ,
Germany and France .
In contrast, international trade in orange juice only started
to increase in the 1940s, after World War II, when citrus processing
technologies were invented and developed. The beginning of citrus production in
Brazil
is placed by researchers at about 1530/40. Brazilian citrus industry started to
play a major role in the economy in the 1930s, after the coffee crisis. The
growth of Brazilian citrus industry was particularly high in the 1960s, when
the freezes that destroyed an important part of Florida citrus fields led to
increased production in Brazil as an alternative supply area, in order to meet
existing orange juice demand in North America and Europe. During the decade of
1980, Brazil
became the largest citrus fruits producer in the world and the first, and
almost exclusive, orange juice exporting country. Historically, the United States
citrus sector had been more domestically oriented. In the nineties, the citrus
industry has become more globally integrated.
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