Montecristo is the name of two brands of premium cigars, one produced in Cuba for Habanos SA, the Cuban state-owned tobacco company, and the other produced in La Romana, Dominican Republic for the Franco-Spanish
tobacco monopoly Altadis SA, a division of Imperial Tobacco.
In July 1935, Alonso Menéndez
purchased the Particulares Factory, makers of the popular Particulares brand
and the lesser-known Byron. Immediately after its acquisition, he created a new
brand named Montecristo.[1]
The name for the brand was
inspired by the Alexandre Dumas, père novel The Count of Monte Cristo, which was supposedly a very popular choice among the torcedores
(cigar rollers) in their factory to have read by the lector on the rolling floor. The now-famous Montecristo logo, consisting of a
triangle of six swords surrounding a fleur-de-lis, was designed by John Hunter Morris and Elkan Co. Ltd., the brand's British distributor.
In July 1936, Menéndez founded
a new firm with a partner, naming it Menéndez, García y Cía.[2] With the growing success of the Montecristo brand, the firm purchased the
faltering H. Upmann Factory from J. Frankau SA in 1937 and transferred the production of
Montecristo from the Particulares Factory to H. Upmann, which continued to be
the home of the Montecristo brand after the Revolution.
J. Frankau continued to be the
sole distributor of the H. Upmann brand in the UK, while John Hunter Morris and
Elkan Co. Ltd. was the sole distributor of Montecristo in Britain. In 1963,
these firms would merge to become Hunters & Frankau, which today is the sole importer and distributor of all Cuban cigars in
the UK.
Several books have incorrectly
stated that the original name of the cigar brand was H. Upmann Montecristo
Selection, but the fact that the brand was founded by Menéndez in 1935 and
his firm did not acquire H. Upmann until 1937 bears this out.
Through the efforts of Alfred Dunhill (the company), the Montecristo brand became incredibly popular worldwide
and to this day accounts for roughly one-quarter of Habanos SA's worldwide
cigar sales, making it the most popular Cuban cigar in the world. After the Cuban Revolution and the nationalization of the cigar industry in Cuba in 1961, Menéndez
and García fled to the Canary Islands where they re-established the brand, but
were later forced to quit due to trademark disputes with Cubatabaco. In the mid-1970s, the operation was moved to La Romana in the
Dominican Republic and released for the US market, where Cuba's rights to the brand
weren't recognized due to the embargo. Menéndez,
García, y Cía is now owned by Altadis SA, who controls its distribution and
marketing in the United States.
The original line had only
five numbered sizes, with a tubed cigar added during the 1940s, but otherwise
remained unchanged until after nationalization. With Menendez and Garcia gone
after 1959, one of the top grade torcedores, José Manuel Gonzalez, was promoted to floor manager and proceeded to breathe new life into the
brand. In the 1970s and 1980s, five new sizes were added: the A, the Especial
No. 1 and 2, the Joyita, and the Petit Tubo. Three other sizes, the Montecristo
No. 6, No. 7, and B, were released but subsequently discontinued, though the B
can occasionally be found in very small releases each year in Cuba.
Through the 1970s and 1980s,
Montecristo continued to rise in popularity among cigar smokers and firmly
entrenched itself as one of Cuba's top selling cigar lines. The Montecristo No. 4 is, itself, the most popular cigar in the world market.
In 2004, another new edition
to the regular line was made with the Edmundo, a large robusto-sized cigar,
named for the hero of Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo, Edmond Dantès.
Montecristo is also regularly
chosen to be featured in Habanos SA's annual Edición Limitada selection
of cigars with a darker vintage wrapper and there are numerous limited edition
releases of special Montecristo cigars for special occasions, anniversaries,
the annual Habanos Festival, charities, etc.
In 2007, a cigar called the
Edmundo Dantes Conde 109 was released as a part of Habanos' regional edition
series. It uses a Montecristo blend and is believed to have a different name
because of trademark right problems in Mexico.
A new, lighter-bodied line was
released at the 11th Habanos Festival in February 2009. The planned name for
the new line had been Sport, but because of EU regulations prohibiting
marketing tobacco with sports imagery, the name was changed to Open with
vitola names inspired by sports such as golf and yachting.
It is often said by expert aficionados that Montecristo No. 4 is the ideal
beginner cigar for those who are new to cigar smoking, and that No. 2 is the
gold standard cigar as a bench mark to all other cigars to be compared to.
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