Lignell & Piispanen

Lignell & Piispanen (L&P) is a Finnish company from Kuopio, manufacturing alcoholic beverages. Its parent company Oy Gust. Ranin was founded in 1852 and the trademark and products of Lignell & Piispanen were merged into it in 1932.

History

In 1783, a distillery was built in place of the current factory. In 1856, O.W. Roering's vodka distillery was founded in the same area, and two years later it was bought by brandy and rum importer Gustav Ranin. In 1872, pharmacists Lignell and Piispanen started manufacturing Arctic raspberry liqueur and other alcoholic beverages. The production ended in 1919 because of the prohibition, and when the prohibition was repelled in 1932, Lignell and Piispanen's alcohol manufacture was sold to Gustav Ranin. In 1985, a new factory was built for the company.

In 1995, when the alcohol law changed, the traditional drinks were added back to the company's product list. Before the law change, the company manufactured 8 to 10 drinks, now about 50. The annual production is about 2 million bottles and it employs about 30 people. About 70 to 75 percent of the products are sold to Alko, 20 to 25 percent are exported and 5 percent are sold through wholesale companies to restaurants. In 2009, the company bought the trademark to the Marskin ryyppy shot.[1]

The company has had disputes with the EU court about the word konjakki (cognac). According to the EU court, genuine French cognac may not be called "konjakki", but must be called by its original French name "cognac". This dispute started with the Hienoa Konjakkia product (″Fine Cognac″), containing cognac made in the French region of Cognac.[2] Products name was changed to Ranin Cognac, according to Gustav Ranin, the founder. [3]

Historically important products

Founders and developers

Sources

References

  1. Laukkanen, Anna: Lakka maistuu pyhinä. Keskisuomalainen, 27 December 2009, p. 16.
  2. "Suomalaisen Lignell & Piispasen mukaan yhtiön konjakki tehdään Cognacin maakunnassa. - Kotimaa - Ilta-Sanomat". iltasanomat.fi. Retrieved 2015-12-24.(Finnish)
  3. "Hienoa Konjakkia sai uuden nimen". Yle.fi. 2012-09-28. Retrieved 2016-08-10.(Finnish)
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