| Lu Yu's statue in Xi'an. |
The answer is South China.
According
to legend, tea was first discovered by the legendary Chinese emperor and
herbalist, in 2737 BCE. It is said that the
emperor liked his drinking water boiled before he drank it so it would be
clean, so that is what his servants did. One day, on a trip to a distant
region, he and his army stopped to rest. A servant began boiling water for him
to drink, and a dead leaf from the wild tea bush fell into the water. It turned
a brownish color, but it was unnoticed and presented to the emperor anyway. The
emperor drank it and found it very refreshing, and cha (tea) came into being.
The mark,
a Chinese dictionary dated to the 3rd century BCE, records that an infusion of
some kind of leaf was used as early as the Zhou Dynasty (1046–256 BCE).
While
historically the origin of tea as a medicinal herb
useful for staying awake is unclear, China
is considered to have the earliest records of tea drinking, with recorded tea
use in its history dating back to the first millennium BCE.
The Han Dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE) used tea as
medicine. The use of tea as a beverage drunk for pleasure on social occasions
dates from the Tang Dynasty (618–907
CE) or earlier.
The Tang
Dynasty writer Lu Yu's (729-804) Cha Jing is an early work on the subject. Tea Classics According to Cha Jing
writing, around CE 760, tea drinking was widespread. The book describes how tea
plants were grown, the leaves processed, and tea prepared as a beverage. It
also describes how tea was evaluated. The book also discusses where the best
tea leaves were produced.
At this
time in tea's history, the nature of the beverage and style of tea preparation
were quite different from the way we experience tea today. Tea leaves were
processed into compressed cakes form. The dried teacake, generally called brick
tea was ground in a stone mortar. Hot water was added to the powdered
teacake, or the powdered teacake was boiled in earthenware kettles then
consumed as a hot beverage.
A form of
compressed tea referred to as white tea was being produced as far back as the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE). This special white tea
of Tang was picked in early spring, when the tea bushes had abundant growths
which resembled silver needles. These "first flushes" were used as
the raw material to make the compressed tea. Tea is an important item in
Chinese culture and is mentioned in the Seven necessities of (Chinese) daily life.
Tea was also used as a relaxing therapy.
In 1753,
Linnaeus described the plant as a single species, Thea sinensis. Later,
however, he recognized two species, Thea Bohea and Thea viridis, as cultivated
in China, and it was long thought that these were the origin of black and green
tea respectively.
Chin-Nung, a celebrated scholar and philosopher,
who existed long before Confucius, is claimed to have said of it: "Tea is
better than wine, for it leadeth not to intoxication, neither does it cause a
man to say foolish things and repent thereof in his sober momentsA little story about it.
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