used for boiling water for tea in Russia and some Middle eastern countries The earliest record of tea in a more
occidental writing is said to be found in the statement of an Arabian traveler, that after 879 the main sources of revenue in
Canton were the duties on salt and tea.
Marco Polo records the deposition of a Chinese minister of finance in 1285 for his arbitrary augmentation of the tea taxes. In 1557, Portugal established a trading port in
Macau, and word of the Chinese drink "chá" spread quickly, but there is no mention of them bringing any samples home. In the early 17th century, a ship of the
Dutch East India Company brought the first green tea leaves to
Amsterdam from China. Tea was known in France by 1636. It enjoyed a brief period of popularity in Paris around 1648. The history of tea in Russia can also be traced back to the 17th century. Tea was first offered by China as a gift to Czar
Michael I in 1618. The Russian ambassador tried the drink; he did not care for it and rejected the offer, delaying tea's Russian introduction by fifty years. By 1689, tea was regularly imported from China to Russia via a caravan of hundreds of camels traveling the year-long journey, making it a precious commodity at the time. Tea was appearing in German
apothecaries by 1657 but never gained much esteem except in coastal areas such as
Ostfriesland. Tea first appeared publicly in mainland Britain during the 1650s, where it was introduced through
coffeehouses. From there it was introduced to British colonies in America and elsewhere. Tea taxation was a large issue; in Britain tea smuggling thrived until the repeal of tea's tax in 1785. In Holland, tea drinkers had to pay for an annual license per person.
Portugal and Italy Tea was first introduced to Europe by Italian traveler
Giovanni Battista Ramusio, who in 1555 published
Voyages and Travels, containing the first European reference to tea, which he calls "Chai Catai"; his accounts were based on second-hand reports in the polities of the Gulf of Aden; Yemen and Somalia. Portuguese priests and merchants in the 16th century made their first contact with tea in China, at which time it was termed
chá. The first Portuguese ships reached China in 1516, and in 1560 Portuguese missionary Gaspar da Cruz published the first Portuguese account of Chinese tea; in 1565 Portuguese missionary Louis Almeida published the first European account of tea in Japan.
India in
Kerala, India Commercial production of tea was first introduced into India by the British, in an attempt to break the Chinese monopoly on tea. The British, using Chinese seeds, plus Chinese planting and cultivating techniques, launched a tea industry by offering land in Assam to any European who agreed to cultivate tea for export. Prior to the British, the plant may have been used for medicinal purposes. Some cite the
Sanjeevani plant as the first recorded reference of tea use in India. However, scientific studies have shown that the Sanjeevani plant is in fact a different plant and is not related to tea. In Assam, there is evidence of pre-modern medicinal use of tea among the Singpho and Khamti tribes. However, commercial production of tea in India did not begin until the arrival of the
British East India Company, at which point large tracts of land were converted for mass tea production. The Chinese variety is used for Sikkim,
Darjeeling tea, and
Kangra tea, while the
Assam variety, clonal to the native to
Assam, was used everywhere else. The British started commercial tea plantations in India and in Ceylon: "In 1824 tea plants were discovered in the hills along the frontier between Burma and Assam. The British introduced
tea culture into India in 1836 and into Ceylon (Sri Lanka) in 1867. At first they used seeds from China, but later seeds from the clonal Assam plant were used." Only black tea was produced until recent decades mostly in India, except in Kangra (present-day Himachal Pradesh) which produced green tea for exporting to central Asia, Afghanistan and neighboring countries. India was the top producer of tea for nearly a century but was displaced by China as the top tea producer in the 21st century. Indian tea companies have acquired a number of iconic foreign tea enterprises including British brand
Tetley. In 1657, Thomas Garway, a "tobacconist and coffee-man" was the first to sell tea in London at his house in
Exchange Alley, charging between 16 and 50 shillings per pound. The same year, tea was listed as an item in the price list in a London coffee house, and the first advertisement for tea appeared in 1658. It is probable that early imports were smuggled via Amsterdam or through sailors arriving on eastern boats. Official trade of tea began in 1664 with an import of only two pound two ounces for presentation to the king, which grew to 24 million pounds per year by 1801. Regular trade began in Canton (now Guangzhou), By the 1720s black tea overtook green tea in popularity as the price dropped, and early on British drinkers began adding sugar and milk to tea, a practice that was not done in China. The escalation of tea importation and sales over the period 1690 to 1750 is mirrored closely by the increase in importation and sales of
cane sugar: the British were not drinking just tea but
sweet tea. Tea had to be paid in silver bullion, and to generate the silver, Britain began supplying
opium from the traditional growing regions of
British India (in present-day Pakistan and Afghanistan) for smuggling into China. Although
opium use in China had a long history as medicine, but the new practice of smoking increased demand. Imports increased fivefold between 1821 and 1837. The Qing government attitudes hardened because of the fiscal and social problems opium created and the court took serious measures to curtail importation of opium in 1838–39. Tea had become an important source of tax revenue for the British Empire, and the banning of the opium trade and thus the creation of funding issues for tea importers was one of the main causes of the
First Opium War. As an attempt to circumvent its dependence on Chinese tea, the East India Company sent Scottish botanist
Robert Fortune to China to purchase and bring out of China tea plants, which were then taken to India. With the exception of a few plants which survived in established Indian gardens, most of the Chinese tea plants Fortune introduced in the north-western provinces of India perished. Due to the British preference and fashion for a strong dark tea brew, which was discovered to be best made from the native varieties of tea plant in India
Assam subspecies (
Camellia sinensis var.
assamica), it proved more important for the development of production there. However the technology and knowledge that was brought from China was instrumental in the later flourishing of the Indian tea industry in Assam and
Sri Lanka. From 1940 to 1952 tea was rationed but coffee was exempted.
The Americas The drinking of tea in the United States was largely influenced by the passage of the
Tea Act and its subsequent protest during the
American Revolution. Tea consumption sharply decreased in America during and after the Revolution, when many Americans switched from drinking tea to drinking coffee, considering tea drinking to be unpatriotic. The American specialty tea market quadrupled in the years from 1993 to 2008, now being worth $6.8 billion a year. Specialty tea houses and retailers also started to pop up during this period. Canadians were big tea drinkers from the days of British colonisation until the Second World War, when they began drinking more coffee like their American neighbors to the south. During the 1990s, Canadians begun to purchase more specialty teas instead of coffee. In South America, the tea production in Brazil has strong roots because of the country's origins in Portugal, the strong presence of Japanese immigrants, and because of the influences of Argentina's
yerba mate culture. Brazil had a big tea production until the 1980s, but it has weakened in the past decades.
Australia The
Aboriginal Australians drank an infusion from the plant species
leptospermum. Upon reaching Australia,
Captain Cook noticed the aboriginal peoples drinking it and called it tea. Today the plant is referred to as the "ti tree". Through colonisation by the British, tea was introduced to Australia. In fact, tea was aboard the
First Fleet in 1788. In 1884, the Cutten brothers established the first commercial tea plantation in Australia in
Bingil Bay in northern
Queensland Nerada Tea. In 1883,
Alfred Bushell opened the first tea shop in Australia in Queensland. In 1899, Bushell's sons moved the enterprise to
Sydney and began selling tea commercially, founding Australia's first commercial tea seller
Bushell's Company. In 2000, Australia consumed 14,000 tonnes of tea annually. Tea production in Australia remains very small and is primarily in northern
New South Wales and
Queensland. Most tea produced in Australia is black tea, although there are small quantities of green tea produced in the
Alpine Valleys region of
Victoria.
Sri Lanka Sri Lanka is renowned for its high quality tea and as the fourth biggest tea producing country globally, after China, India and Kenya, and has a production share of 9% in the international sphere. The total extent of land under tea cultivation has been assessed at approximately 187,309 hectares. The plantations started by the British were initially taken over by the government in the 1960s but have been privatized and are now run by plantation companies which own a few estates or tea plantations each. Ceylon tea is divided into 3 groups as Upcountry, Mid country and Low country tea based on the geography of the land on which it is grown.
Africa The Somali
Ajuran empire which established bilateral trading ties with Ming dynasty China in the 13th century brought with them a myriad of commodities including tea. Africa has seen greatly increased tea production in recent decades, the great majority for export to Europe and North America respectively, produced on large estates, often owned by tea companies from the export markets. Almost all production is of basic mass-market teas, processed by the
crush, tear, curl method. == See also ==