Tea Facts

Tea History

The Origins of Tea - 2737 BC

In ancient China, Emperor Shen Nung ruled that all drinking water must be boiled as a hygienic precaution. One day while visiting a distant region of his realm, he and the court stopped to rest. In accordance with his ruling, the servants began to boil water for the court to drink. Dried leaves from a nearby bush fell into the boiling water, and a brown liquid was infused into the water. The Emperor drank some, and found it very refreshing. And so according to legend, tea was created!

Tea gets its name - 780 AD

The first book on tea "Ch´a Ching", was written by the Chinese author Lu Yu. It comprises three volumes and covers tea from its growth through to its making and drinking. There are many illustrations of tea making utensils and some say that the book inspired the Buddhist priests to create the Japanese tea ceremony. The modern term "tea" derives from early Chinese dialect words - such as Tchai, Cha and Tay - used both to describe the beverage and the leaf.


Tea reaches England - 1657

Tea arrived in Britain when Thomas Garraway sold it at his coffeehouse in London´s Exchange Alley. Sale of tea began in London as the East India Company undercut Dutch prices and advertised tea as a panacea for apoplexia, catarrh, colic, consumption, drowsiness, epilepsy, gallstones, lethargy, migraine, paralysis and vertigo.




Smugglers - 1700’s

Extremely high taxes on tea meant that it was still rare in England and a luxury for the upper classes only. Smuggling began and by 1700, two thirds of all tea drunk in Britain had been smuggled into the country. The tea came over from Holland and Scandinavia, was met by local fishing boats then smuggled inland, through underground passages and hidden pathways. Smuggling continued until 1784, when the Prime Minister was forced to slash the heavy taxes on teas.


The Boston Tea Party - 1773

As an example of American rebellion against British Rule, it represented one of the significant events leading to the American War of Independence. Angered by heavy taxes on tea, the Americans had decided that the British had interfered once too often. On 16th December 1773 a mob disguised as Native American Indians, boarded British ships in Boston harbour. They smashed open the tea cargoes and threw them into the sea. Every patriotic American gave up tea drinking and turned to coffee!


The Tea Clippers - 1800’s

Until the mid 1800´s, cargo ships usually took between twelve and fifteen months to make passage from ports in the East to those in London. Recognising that the old ships had to carry too much weight, a more streamlined vessel was designed, capable of carrying greater cargo at a greater speed. The clipper was born! By the mid 1800´s, races between the tea clippers had become a great annual competition, raced between China and London. The most famous clipper was the Cutty Sark built in 1868.