Tea
Tea bush in Sri Lanka
Wild tea bushes grew in southern China, where people first began in the Stone Age to make tea by drying tea leaves and then steeping them in hot water. By about 2000 BC, even before they were farming wheat, people in southern China were growing tea bushes on farms. Southern China seems to be the only place where people tamed wild tea bushes for farming, and everybody else got their tea bushes from those first tea farmers.
By the time of the Han Dynasty, about 200 BC, Chinese doctors used to tell sick people to drink tea as a kind of medicine. There was also a tradition of offering tea to guests when they came to your house. People who were too poor to buy tea offered their guests hot water.
Around 650 AD, Sogdian traders along the Silk Road brought tea from China to the Islamic Empire, where it soon became a popular drink. People in the Islamic Empire had just begun to get sugar from India, so they soon began to drink sugar in their tea.
When European travelers first began coming to China in the 1600s AD, Chinese people offered them tea to drink. The English word "tea" comes from the Chinese word "te" for tea. These Europeans took lots of tea back to Europe, where tea became very popular. But tea bushes won't grow well in Europe's wet, cold climate. Tea bushes need to be hot and dry. So the Europeans had to keep buying all their tea from China. To get around this problem, the British, who had conquered India, began to grow tea there, and soon a lot of the world's tea came from India.
Learn by Doing - Tea
For more information about tea, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:





