Bolívar (cigar brand) explained

Bolívar is the name of two brands of premium cigar, one produced on the island of Cuba for Habanos SA, the Cuban state-owned tobacco company, and the other produced in the Dominican Republic from Dominican and Nicaraguan tobacco for General Cigar Company, which is today a subsidiary of Scandinavian Tobacco Group. Both are named for the South American revolutionary, Simón Bolívar.

The Cuban-produced Bolívar cigars are very full-bodied, with considerable ligero in the blend and have traditionally been some of the strongest and most full-bodied Havana cigars.[1] [2]

History

The brand was founded (possibly in Great Britain) by José F. Rocha around 1901 or 1902, though the brand was not registered in Havana (Cuba) until 1921, under the ownership of Rocha's firm, J.F. Rocha y Cia.[1]

During this time, the Bolívar brand produced the world's smallest cigar called the Delgado. Measuring a mere 1 inches with a 20 ring gauge, the Delgado had the honor of having a miniature box of its cigars featured in the royal nursery's dollhouse at Windsor Castle.

The company and rights to the brand name were purchased in 1954 by Cifuentes y Cia after Rocha's death and production was moved to the famous Partágas Factory in Havana (today known as the Francisco Pérez Germán factory), where many of its sizes are still produced today.[1]

The Cuban Bolívar has a reputation among cigar aficionados of being one of the strongest and most full-bodied cigars, with its Royal Corona, Coronas Junior, Petit Coronas, and Belicosos Finos being famous examples of the marque.[1] [3] In 2002, when Altadis bought a controlling share in the Cuban government-owned cigar distributor, Habanos SA, a number of changes in cigar production were instituted. One of these changes was the decision to gradually turn the various brands of Cuban cigars to either all-handmade or all-machine-made lines. Bolívar, which has historically produced a variety of handmade and machine-made or machine-finished cigars, had several of its vitolas cut from production, with only one remaining, the cigarillo-sized Chicos. It remains to be seen if this size will eventually cease to be produced as well.

In 2004,[4] Wolters in Cologne, Germany, had a few thousand boxes of Bolívar Gold Medals produced by Habanos SA exclusively for their shop. The cigars are an older, discontinued Bolívar size in the Cervantes (lonsdale) format, wrapped in gold foil on one half with a special Bolívar band in the middle and come packaged in boxes of ten. Following this release the Gold Medal was reinstated in 2007 as a LCDH cigar but was then discontinued in 2011.

The Bolívar brand has also been chosen several times for special sizes in regional releases.

Vitolas in the Bolívar Line

The following list of vitolas de salida (commercial vitolas) within the Bolívar marque lists their size and ring gauge in Imperial (and Metric), their vitolas de galera (factory vitolas), and their common name in American cigar slang.[5]

Hand-Made Vitolas

Edición Limitada Releases

Edición Regional Releases

Edicion Limitada Releases

La Casa del Habano Releases

Habanos Collection Series

Recently Discontinued Vitolas

General Cigar Company's Bolívar brand

After tobacco was nationalized following the Cuban Revolution, the Cifuentes family fled Cuba. In 1978, following a 17-year hiatus, Ramón Cifuentes licensed the Partágas and Bolívar brand names to General Cigar Company, best known as the maker of White Owl, which relaunched a completely new Bolívar branded cigar for the lucrative American market.[6] General Cigar's initial blend for their Bolivar branded cigars used mild Olor filler tobacco from the Dominican Republic, and bore little resemblance to the original Havana Bolívar in either body or flavor.[1]

In 2005, the Dominican Bolívar brand was completely reformulated with the addition of a Honduran San Agustin ligero wrapper and Nicaraguan filler tobacco in the blend to more closely approximate the full-bodied strength of the Cuban Bolívar.[7]

In popular culture

In the movie Black Hawk Down, Somali warlord Osman Ali Atto smokes Bolívar Belicoso cigars. [8] [9]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bati, Anwer, The Cigar Companion; Philadelphia, PA: Running Press,, 9780762401420 (1993), pp. 66-68
  2. Web site: Inc. . M. Shanken Communications . Bolivar Cigar Aficionado . 2023-01-08 . Cigar Aficionado . en-US.
  3. Web site: Inc . M. Shanken Communications . Bolivar . 2023-01-08 . Cigar Aficionado . en-US.
  4. Web site: Cuban Cigar Website . 17 June 2013 . 22 January 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140122145504/http://www.cubancigarwebsite.com/brand.aspx?brand=Bol%7Civar#26_5th_Avenue_Germany . live .
  5. Web site: Bolívar . Cuban Cigar Website . 2022-06-01 . 2016-07-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160720184604/http://www.cubancigarwebsite.com/brand.aspx?brand=Bol%7Civar . live .
  6. James Suckling, "The Partagas Family: Cigar Smokers from Around the World Gathered in Havana and Orlando This Summer to Celebrate the 150th Anniversary of Partagas Cigars," Cigar Aficionado, vol. 4, no. 2 (Winter 1995/96), pp. 134–143.
  7. General Cigar Press Release (July, 2005), General Cigar To Debut Bolivar Cigar
  8. Web site: Iconic Cigar Moments in Films James J Fox Blog . 2023-01-25 . www.jjfox.co.uk.
  9. Web site: Ellie . 2020-03-31 . Iconic Cigar Scenes From Hollywood Classics . 2023-01-25 . Havana House . en-GB.