A Brief History of Green
Tea
by Michael Ganzeveld
The first tea plants known
were thought to be grown in Yunnan Province in southern China.
From there they spread to other parts of Asia that had the
right types of soil and weather conditions. The custom
of drinking tea is said to have originated in China with the
emperor Shen Nong. Regarded as an iconoclast of Chinese
medicine, he introduced the tea plant to people around the year
2700 B.C. The classic on Chinese Tea, Cha jing (The Book of
Tea), written by the scholar Lu Yu in A.D. 760, recounts Shen
Nong’s efforts to discover the medicinal effectiveness of over
three hundred varieties of roots, grass, and tree barks.
Legend has it that he would try all of
them on himself first and whenever he ingested something
poisonous he would cleanse himself by eating tea
leaves.
It seems certain that tea leaves were initially eaten as a
medicine long before tea became a popular drink. In fact, there
are still some hill tribes in southern China, Thailand, and
northern Myanmar that still eat pickled tea leaves, and only
until recent times were they aware that a drink could be brewed
from the same leaves!
According to Kouga, the ancient dictionary written during the
Later Han dynasty (A.D. 25-220), people in Sichuan Province of
western China, compressed steamed leaves into hard bricks to
help maintain the quality of the tea over a greater period
(very handy when transporting, too). When making a beverage
they would season the mixture with ginger or onion. However,
this early concoction would not qualify as a conventional
beverage in the usual sense because its intended use was
medicinal.
During the Three Kingdoms period (221-65), the popularity of
tea saw a rapid increase. One cause for this was the widening
increase in the practice of Buddhism, which was beginning to
gain a wider following. Buddhism prohibits the drinking of
alcohol and so that boosted the demand for tea.
During the Sui dynasty (581-618), the custom of drinking tea,
previously limited to the aristocracy and Buddhist monks, began
to filter through to other classes. In the mid-eighth century,
tea shops sprung up, and gradually tea became an indispensable
beverage for ordinary city-dwellers.
It was around this time that Lu Yu, who came from the tea
producing center of Hubei Province, wrote his treatise on tea.
The range of Yu’s work is impressive. It covers the origins,
methods of plant cultivation, the types of utensils used, the
best ways to prepare and drink tea, and tales relating to tea
and tea-growing. His expansive compendium of information
spanned three volumes, opening with the propitious line: “There
are good luck trees in the south that are beneficial to a
person’s health.” When published the book met with great
acclaim and is still looked upon today as a bible of sorts
concerning tea.
Tea arrived in Japan from China. It was brought by Japanese
Buddhist monks who accompanied the special representatives sent
to China in the early Heian period (794-1185). Among the monks
who traveled to China were Saicho (767-822), Kukai (774-835),
and Eichu (743-816). The first record of the custom of
tea-drinking in Japan appeared in Nihon koki (Notes on Japan),
compiled in the Heian period. Eichu, a priest at the temple of
Bonshakuji in Omi, Aichi Prefecture, returned to China in 815.
The Nihon koki records that when Emperor Saga (reign, 809-23)
visited Omi, Eichu invited him to his temple and served him
sencha, suggesting that drinking tea, a popular pastime in Tang
times, had also become fashionable in Japan’s intellectual
circles. Roun-shu, an anthology of Chinese poetry written in
Japanese in 814, also mentions tea-tasting.
At that time, tea probably came in the form of hard bricks, as
described by Lu Yu. Compressed into a brick shape into a brick
shape, tea was not only easy to transport but also held up
better during the long voyage from China. This was most likely
the type of tea brought to Japan, even though leaf tea was also
used in China at that time. The brick was first warmed over a
flame and then a portion was broken off by hand or shaved off
with a knife. The shavings were ground with a mortar into a
powder, which was added to a pan of hot water and brewed and
then was served in a bowl.
Emperor Saga tried to encourage the spread of tea by demanding
provinces in the Kinki region around Kyoto to grow the plant.
He established tea gardens in one district of Kyoto, and
started growing and processing it for the use of physicians
attached to the court. This imperial tea, however, found use
mostly in rituals performed by the aristocracy; the beverage
had yet to become an item for consumption by the common
people.
Ordinary Japanese only began to drink tea much later, after
Eisai (1141-1215), the founder of the Rinzai sect of Zen
Buddhism, brought back a new type of seedling from Sung-dynasty
China. With it he introduced a new way of drinking tea which
was known as the “matcha style.” Eisai encouraged the
cultivation of tea trees, and his Kissa yojoki (Health Benefits
of Tea) tied tea-drinking to longevity and launched tea in
Japan on a large scale.
http://www.greenteaphd.com
About the Author
Michael Ganzeveld is a graduate of Iowa State University and
manages a new health website called GreenTeaPhD.com
To use this article I ask you to kindly link to the url:
http://www.greenteaphd.com
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