A History of Tea Timeline
The
Tea Story:
2737
B.C.
• The second emperor of China, Shen Nung, discovers
tea when tea leaves blow into his cup of hot water or so
the story goes.
350
A.D.
• A Chinese dictionary cites tea for the first time
as Erh Ya.
400-600
• Demand for tea as a medicinal beverage rises in
China and cultivation processes are developed. Many tea
drinkers add onion, ginger, spices, or orange to their teas.
400
• Now called Kuang Ya in the Chinese dictionary, tea
and its detailed infusion and preparation steps are defined.
479
• Turkish traders bargain for tea on the border of
Mongolia.
593
• Buddhism and tea journey from China to Japan. Japanese
priests studying in China carried tea seeds and leaves back.
618-907
T'ang Dynasty
• Tea becomes a popular drink in China for both its
flavor and medicinal qualities.
648-749
• Japanese monk Gyoki plants the first tea bushes
in 49 Buddhist temple gardens.
• Tea in Japan is rare and expensive, enjoyed mostly
by high priests and the aristocracy.
725
• The Chinese give tea give its own character ch’a.
729
• The Japanese emperor serves powdered tea (named
hiki-cha from the Chinese character) to Buddhist priests.
780
• First tea tax imposed in China.
• Chinese poet-scholar Lu Yu writes the first book
of tea titled Ch’a Ching (The Classic of Tea) in timely
alignment with the Taoist beliefs. The book covers detailed
ancient Chinese tea cultivation and preparation techniques.
805
• Buddhism and tea devotion spreads further.
• The Japanese Buddhist saint and priest Saicho and
monk Kobo Daishi bring tea seeds and cultivation and manufacturing
tips back from China and plant gardens in the Japanese temples.
960-1280
Sung Dynasty
• Chinese tea drinking is on the rise, as are elegant
teahouses and teacups carefully crafted from porcelain and
pottery.
• Drinking powdered and frothed tea or tea scented
with flowers is widespread in China while earlier flavorings
fall by the wayside.
• Zen Buddhism catches on in Japan via China and along
come tea-drinking temple rituals.
1101-1125
• Chinese Emperor Hui Tsung becomes tea obsessed and
writes about the best tea-whisking methods and holds tea-tasting
tournaments in the court. While “tea minded,”
so the story goes, he doesn’t notice the Mongol take
over of his empire.
• Teahouses in garden settings pop up around China.
1191
• Japanese Buddhist abbot Eisai, who introduced Zen
Buddhism to Japan, brings tea seeds from China and plants
them around his Kyoto temple.
1206-1368
Yuan Dynasty
• During the Mongol take over of China, tea becomes
a commonplace beverage buy never regains its high social
status.
1211
• Japanese Buddhist abbot Eisai writes the first Japanese
tea book Kitcha-Yojoki (Book of Tea Sanitation).
1280
• Mongolia takes over of China and since the Emperor
of Mongol isn’t a “tea guy,” tea drinking
dies down in the courts and among the aristocracy. The masses
continue to indulge.
1368-1644
Ming Dynasty
• At the fall of the Mongol take over, all teas —
green, black, and oolong — is easily found in China.
• The process of steeping whole tea leaves in cups
or teapots becomes popular.
1422-1502
• The Japanese tea ceremony emerges onto the scene.
First created by a Zen priest named Murata Shuko, the ceremony
is called Cha-no-yu, literally meaning "hot water tea"
and celebrates the mundane aspects of everyday life.
• Tea’s status elevates to an art form and almost
a religion.
1484
• Japan's shogun Yoshimasa encourages tea ceremonies,
painting, and drama.
1589
• Europeans learn about tea when a Venetian author
credits the lengthy lives of Asians to their tea drinking.
1597
• Tea is mentioned for the first time in an English
translation of Dutch navigator Jan Hugo van Linschooten's
travels, in which he refers to tea as chaa.
End
of 1500s
• Japanese tea master Sen-no Rikyu opens the first
independent teahouse and evolves the tea ceremony into its
current simple and aesthetic ritual. During this ceremony,
one takes a garden path into a portico, enters upon hearing
the host’s gong, washes in a special room, and then
enters a small tearoom that holds a painting or flower arrangement
to gaze upon. The tea master uses special utensils to whisk
the intense powdered tea. Tea drinkers enjoy the art or
flowers and then smell and slurp from a shared teabowl.
• Europeans hear about tea again when Portuguese priests
spreading Roman Catholicism through China taste tea and
write about its medicinal and taste benefits.
1610
• The Dutch bring back green tea from Japan (although
some argue it was from China).
• Dutch East India Company market tea as an exotic
medicinal drink, but it’s so expensive only the aristocracy
can afford the tea and its serving pieces.
1618
• Chinese ambassadors present the Russian Czar Alexis
with many chests of tea, which are refused as useless.
1635
• Tea catches on in the Dutch court.
• A German physician touts a warning about the dangers
of tea drinking.
1637
• Wealthy Dutch merchants’ wives serve tea at
parties.
1650-1700
• Tea parties become quite trendy among women across
the social classes. Husbands cry family ruin, and religious
reformers call for a ban.
1650
• The Dutch introduce several teas and tea traditions
to New Amsterdam, which later becomes New York.
1657
• The first tea is sold as a health beverage in London,
England at Garway's Coffee House.
1661
• The debate over tea’s health benefits versus
detriments heightens when a Dutch doctor praises its curative
side while French and German doctors call out its harmful
side.
1662
• When Charles II takes a tea-drinking bride (Catherine
Braganza of Portugal), tea becomes so chic that alcohol
consumption declines.
1664
• English East India Company brings the gift of tea
to the British king and queen.
• The British take over New Amsterdam, name it New
York, and a British tea tradition ensues.
1666
• Holland tea prices drop to $80-$100 per pound.
1669
• English East India Company monopolizes British tea
imports after convincing British government to ban Dutch
imports of tea.
1670
• The Massachusetts colony is known to drink black
tea.
1680s
• Tea with milk is mentioned in Madam de Sévigné’s
letters.
• The Duchess of York introduces tea to Scotland.
1690
• The first tea is sold publicly in Massachusetts.
1697
• The first known Taiwanese cultivation and export
of domestic tea takes place.
Late
1600s
• Russia and China sign a treaty that brings the tea
trade across Mongolia and Siberia.
18th
Century
• The controversy over tea continues in England and
Scotland where opponents claim it’s overpriced, harmful
to one’s health, and may even lead to moral decay.
1702-14
• During Queen Anne’s reign, tea drinking thrives
in British coffeehouses.
1705
• Annual tea importation to England tops 800,000 pounds.
1706
• Thomas Twining serves up tea at Tom’s Coffee
House in London.
1717
• Tom’s Coffee House evolves into the first
teashop called the Golden Lyon. Both men and women patronize
the shop.
1723
• British Prime Minister Robert Walpole reduces British
import taxes on tea.
1735
• The Russian Empress extends tea as a regulated trade.
• In order to fill Russia’s tea demand, traders
and three hundred camels travel 11,000 miles to and from
China, which takes sixteen months.
• Russian tea-drinking customs emerge, which entail
using tea concentrate, adding hot water, topping it with
a lemon, and drinking it through a lump of sugar held between
the teeth.
1765
• Tea easily ranks as the most popular beverage in
the American colonies.
1767
• The Townshend Revenue Act passes British Parliament,
imposing duty on tea and other goods imported into the British
American colonies.
• A town meeting is held in Boston to protest the
Townshend Revenue Act, which leads to an American boycott
of British imports and a smuggling in of Dutch teas.
1770
• Parliament rescinds the Townshend Revenue Act, eliminating
all import taxes except those on teas.
1773
• In protest of British tea taxes and in what becomes
known as the Boston Tea Party, colonists disguised as Native
Americans board East India Company ships and unload hundreds
of chests of tea into the harbor.
• Such “tea parties” are repeated in Philadelphia,
New York, Maine, North Carolina, and Maryland through 1774.
1774
• A furious British Parliament passes the Coercive
Acts in response to the American “tea party”
rebellions.
• King George III agrees to the Boston Port Bill,
which closes the Boston Harbor until the East India Company
is reimbursed for its tea.
1775
• After several British attempts to end the taxation
protests, the American Revolution begins.
1778
• Before the indigenous Assam tea plants is identified,
British naturalist Sir Joseph Banks, hired by the East India
Company, suggests that India grow plant and cultivate imported
Chinese tea. For 50 years, India is unsuccessful.
1784
• Parliament further reduces the British import taxes
on tea in an effort to end the smuggling that accounts for
the majority of the nation's tea imports.
1785
• 11 million pounds of tea are brought into England.
1797
• English tea drinking hits a rate of 2 pounds per
capita annually, a rate that increases by five times over
the next 10 years.
1815-1831
• Samples of indigenous Indian tea plants are sent
to an East India Company botanist who is slowly convinced
that they are bona fide tea plants.
1826
• English Quaker John Horniman introduces the first
retail tea in sealed, lead-lined packages.
1830
• Congress reduces U.S. duties on coffee and tea and
other imports.
1833
• By an act of the British Prime Minister Charles
Grey (the second Earl Grey and the namesake of the famous
tea), the East India Company loses its monopoly in the trade
with China, mostly in tea.
1835
• The East India Company starts the first tea plantations
in Assam, India.
1837
• The first American consul at Canton, Major Samuel
Shaw, trades cargo for tea and silk, earning investors a
great return on their capital and encouraging more Americans
to trade with China.
1838
• The first tea from Indian soil and imported Chinese
tea plants is sold. A small amount is sent to England and
quickly purchased due to its uniqueness.
1840s
• American clipper ships speed up tea transports to
America and Europe.
1840s
and 50s
• The first tea plants, imports from China and India,
are cultivated on a trial basis in Sri Lanka (Ceylon).
1840
• Anna the Duchess of Bedford introduces afternoon
tea, which becomes a lasting English ritual.
1849
• Parliament ends the Britain's Navigation Acts, and
U.S. clipper ships are allowed to transport China tea to
British ports.
• Tea wholesaler Henry Charles Harrod takes over a
London grocery store and grows it into one of the world's
largest department stores.
1850
• Londoners get their first peak at a U.S. clipper
ship when one arrives from Hong Kong full of China tea.
• U.S. clipper ships soon desert China trade for the
more profitable work of taking gold seekers to California.
1856
• Tea is planted in and about Darjeeling, India.
1859
• Local New York merchant George Huntington Hartford
and his employer George P. Gilman give the A&P retail
chain its start as the Great American Tea Company store.
Hartford and Gilman buy whole clipper shipments from the
New York harbor and sell the tea 1/3 cheaper than other
merchants.
1866
• Over 90 percent of Britain's tea is still imported
from China.
1869
• The Suez Canal opens, shortening the trip to China
and making steamships more economical.
• In a marketing effort to capitalize on the transcontinental
rail link fervor, the Great American Tea Company is renamed
the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company.
• A plant fungus ruins the coffee crop in Ceylon and
spreads throughout the Orient and Pacific, giving a hefty
boost to tea drinking.
1870
• Twinings of England begins to blend tea for uniformity.
1872
• The Adulteration of Food, Drink, and Drugs Act deems
the sale of adulterated drugs or other unlabeled mixtures
with foreign additives that increase weight as punishable
offenses.
1875
• A new British Sale of Food and Drugs Law calls adulteration
hazardous to personal health and increases its legal consequences
to a heavy fine or imprisonment.
1876
• Thomas Johnstone Lipton opens his first shop in
Glasgow, using American merchandising methods he learned
working in the grocery section of a New York department
store.
1890
• Thomas Lipton buys tea estates in Ceylon, in order
to sell tea at a reasonable price at his growing chain of
300 grocery stores.
Late
1800s
• Assam tea plants take over imported Chinese plants
in India and its tea market booms.
• Ceylon’s successful coffee market turns into
a successful tea market.
1904
• Englishman Richard Blechynden creates iced tea during
a heat wave at the St Louis World Fair.
1904
• Green tea and Formosan (Taiwanese) tea outsells
black tea by five times in the U.S.
1908
• New York tea importer Thomas Sullivan inadvertently
invents tea bags when he sends tea to clients in small silk
bags, and they mistakenly steep the bags whole.
1909
• Thomas Lipton begins blending and packaging his
tea in New York.
1910
• Sumatra, Indonesia becomes a cultivator and exporter
of tea followed by Kenya and parts of Africa.
Sources:
www.inpursuitoftea.com
www.246.dk/teachronology.html (web link no longer valid)
McCoy,
Elin and John Frederick Walker, Coffee and Tea,
G.S. Haley Company, Inc., 1998.
|