How an 18th-century royal obsession foreshadowed one of science’s most powerful tools
Imagine trying to settle a public health debate not with statistics or peer review, but with royal authority.
This was Sweden in the late 1700s. Coffee—now a national treasure—was then viewed with suspicion. Some blamed it for moral decay, poor health, and social disorder. Among its fiercest critics was King Gustaf III, who was convinced that coffee was slowly killing his people.
So he did what only an absolute monarch could do.
He ordered an experiment.
A royal experiment with twins ☕๐
Two identical twins, condemned to death, had their sentences commuted. In exchange, they were subjected to a lifelong trial:
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One twin had to drink coffee every day
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The other had to drink tea every day
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Physicians were appointed to monitor their health
The logic—remarkably modern in spirit—was simple: identical twins share the same genes. Change one thing (coffee vs tea), and you reveal its effects.
The outcome, however, was not what the king expected.
The doctors died first.
The king himself was assassinated in 1792.
The tea-drinking twin died in old age.
The coffee-drinking twin lived even longer.
Instead of proving coffee’s danger, the experiment became a historical punchline. Coffee survived the king, the physicians, and the prohibition. Sweden went on to become one of the world’s most coffee-loving nations.
But beneath the irony lies something profound.
Without realizing it, Gustaf III had stumbled onto the core idea behind twin studies—a method that would later reshape medicine, psychology, genetics, and epidemiology.
From royal curiosity to scientific method
The real intellectual birth of twin studies came almost a century later with Francis Galton, Charles Darwin’s cousin. Galton posed a deceptively simple question:
Are we shaped more by nature or by nurture?
Twins offered a natural experiment:
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Monozygotic (identical) twins share virtually all their genes
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Dizygotic (fraternal) twins share about half, like ordinary siblings
By comparing similarities between these groups, Galton laid the groundwork for disentangling genetic and environmental influences. The question of nature versus nurture became measurable.
This idea exploded in the 20th century.
Where twin studies changed the world
1. Human genetics and heritability
Twin studies made it possible to estimate how much of a trait—height, intelligence, disease risk—is inherited.
They revealed that:
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Height is highly heritable
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Many diseases have both genetic and environmental components
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“Purely genetic” or “purely environmental” traits are rare
This framework underpins modern genetics.
2. Psychology and behavior
Twin studies transformed psychology from speculation to science.
They were used to study:
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Intelligence and personality
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Mental health conditions (schizophrenia, depression)
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Addiction and risk-taking behavior
Some findings were controversial, even uncomfortable, but they forced the field to confront complexity instead of ideology.
3. Nutrition and epidemiology ๐
Here is where the story circles back to coffee.
Modern nutritional twin studies compare genetically identical individuals who eat differently. This design sharply reduces confounding:
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One twin drinks more coffee
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One twin eats more fat
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One twin exercises more
Differences in health outcomes can be attributed far more confidently to lifestyle.
These studies have been used to investigate:
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Coffee and cardiovascular disease
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Sugar and insulin resistance
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Diet patterns and obesity
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Gut microbiome responses to food
Unlike Gustaf III’s experiment, modern studies measure:
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Blood biomarkers
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Metabolites
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Microbiomes
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Disease risk decades before death
The result? Coffee, once feared, is now associated with neutral or even protective effects in many contexts.
4. Epigenetics: when twins diverge
One of the most fascinating modern discoveries is that identical twins become less identical over time.
Their DNA sequence stays the same, but:
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Chemical modifications (epigenetics) change
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Gene expression diverges
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Lifestyles leave molecular fingerprints
This explains why one twin may develop disease while the other does not—and shows that genes are not destiny.
Ethics: from prisoners to partners
The Swedish experiment would be unthinkable today.
Modern twin research is built on:
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Informed consent
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Ethics committees
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The right to withdraw
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Participant-centered study design
Twins are no longer experimental subjects of authority—they are collaborators in discovery.
The deeper lesson
King Gustaf III wanted to prove a belief.
Modern science wants to test a hypothesis.
That distinction changed everything.
The coffee twins remind us that:
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Good intuition is not enough
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Clever ideas need rigorous methods
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Even flawed experiments can foreshadow great science
What began as a royal attempt to ban coffee became, in hindsight, a crude preview of one of the most powerful tools in modern biology.
So the next time you sip a cup of coffee, consider this:
It outlived a king—and helped inspire a revolution in how we understand ourselves.