There are various
legends surrounding the origins of tea. Perhaps the most famous is the Chinese
story of Shen Nung, the emperor and renowned herbalist, who was boiling his
drinking water when leaves from a nearby tea shrub blew into the cauldron. He
tasted the resulting brew, and the beverage of tea was born.
An alternative story claims that
links tea drinking to the Indian prince Bodhidharma, who converted to Buddhism
and in the sixth century and went to China to spread the word. He believed that
it was necessary to stay awake constantly for meditation and prayer, and took
to chewing leaves from the tea shrub, which acted as stimulant, helping him
stay awake. (An alternative, more macabre version has Bodhidharma accidentally
falling asleep, and upon waking cutting off his own eyelids in disgust at
himself. He threw the eyelids away, and from them sprouted the first tea
shrub).
Part of the problem
in pinpointing the origins of tea stems from the fact that the Chinese
character t'u is used in early sources to describe infusions made from several
different plants, not necessarily just tea. By the third century AD though a
new character, ch'a, was developed to refer specifically to tea. Ch'a is very
similar in its calligraphy to t'u, and its development suggests that tea had
become such a popular drink that it needed its own character. The word ch'a is
now sometimes used in English to refer to China tea.
Tea was certainly
known as a beverage in the time of Confucius (c.551-479 BC) and grew in
popularity during the Han Dynasty (206 BC - 220 AD). By the time of the Tang
Dynasty (618-906 AD) tea was the national drink of China, spreading from court
circles to be popular throughout Chinese society. It was during this time that
the practice developed of sending finest teas to the emperor's court as a
tribute to him.
At this time, it
was manufactured in brick form: the tea leaves were pounded and pressed into a
brick-shaped mold, then dried. To prepare the tea, part of the brick was ground
down, and the result was boiled in water. Later, powdered tea was developed
from green tea leaves. This gained popularity during the Sung Dynasty (960-1279
AD). Boiled water was poured onto the powder and left to brew, and the
resulting liquid was whisked into a frothy tea. It was during this period that
tea drinking became popular in Japan, reintroduced there by a Zen Buddhist monk
who had been studying in China. So in Japan, it was the Sung method of
preparing tea that took hold.
In China, tea fell out of favour as a drink during the years of the
Mongol Yuan Dynasty (1280-1368), when the Mongol rulers considered the drinking
of tea a symbol of decadence. But it returned to popularity under the native
Chinese Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). After years of foreign rule, this Dynasty saw
a revival of all things considered quintessentially Chinese, and tea was
certainly one of them. It was in this period that tea began to be brewed by
steeping cured loose leaves in boiling water. Because it was at this time that
the tea was first tried by Europeans, it was this method of making tea that
became popular in the West, and remains so to this day. Also under the Ming
Dynasty there was experimentation with different types of teas, fermented black
teas, unfermented green teas, and the semi-fermented variety that it is now
known as oolong, and within these categories with innumerable different
varieties.
But the variation in types of tea in China is not even half the story.
The history of tea in China and Japan is bound up with its cultural
significance.For tea was a drink that would take on literary, artistic and even
religious overtones. This can be traced to the writing of a fascinating
treatise on tea by a Chinese scholar called Lu Yu.By the time Lu Yu wrote the
Ch'a Ching, The Classic of Tea, in the eighth century, tea was already a fairly
common drink in China.
But Lu Yu's work was the single most influential aspect in developing
the cultural significance of tea. Little is known about the man himself, except
that he was probably born in the second of the eighth century and died early in
the ninth century. He was a scholar from Hupei Province in Ching Ling, an area
of Southern China where the cultivation of tea was most widespread, and lived
for a time in seclusion in Chekiang Province. It was during this time that one
story claims he
came to write the Ch'a Ching. According to this, he had been walking in the
wilderness, chanting poetry until he was moved to tears. Returning home for
some tea he was inspired to write the Ch'a Ching. A more prosaic version of
events suggests that the Ch'a Ching was in fact commissioned by a group of tea
merchants, wanting to popularise the drink that was the basis of their
livelihood. If this is the case, then it was a remarkably early - and
remarkably successful - work of PR!
The Ch'a Ching itself elevates the preparation and drinking of tea to
near-religious status. Like a religious ceremony, there is a set ritual, using
particular implements which are endowed with individual significance, and there
are guidelines on the appropriate state of mind for the tea drinker, and the
atmosphere in which tea should be drunk. This similarity to religious ritual is
no coincidence; the Taoist faith was central to culture in eighth century
China, and with it the belief that every detail of life was an act of living
that was worthy of celebration, and that one should attempt to find beauty
everywhere in the world. Thus the emphasis on tranquility and harmony in the
preparation and drinking of tea was recognition of its part in the masterpiece
of life.
The Ch'a Ching
begins with an explanation of the tea shrub and how it grows, and on the proper
manufacture of tea, right down to the weather conditions when it should be
picked (only ever on a clear day). Lu Yu next describes the implements needed
for the preparation of tea - 24 in all, a number which would put even the most
elaborate modern western tea service to shame! These range from the brazier and
the cauldron for heating the water, to the roller needed to grind the solid
bricks of tea, to the bowls from which the tea was drunk, to the container for
carrying it all. Lu Yu gives advice on every aspect of these implements, and
indeed the right equipment was so important to him that he states that if even
one implement is missing, it is usually best to dispense with the tea
altogether.Lu Yu then gives advice on the best sources of water for tea
(mountain water from slow-flowing streams is best), the stages of boiling, and
the correct method of drinking the finished beverage.After all the rigours of
its preparation, it is no surprise that Lu Yu believes that tea must be sipped
slowly in order to savour the flavour. He also states that to enjoy the tea at
its best, the drinker should have no more that three cups, and five at the
most.
He also laments the practice of adulterating
tea and lists some of the things added to it by his contemporaries. Some
of these - ginger, orange peel and peppermint - are familiar to tea drinkers
now, but Lu Yu also mentions the custom of adding onion to the boiling tea! In
fact, the only adulterant of which Lu Yu approves would also now be considered
very strange by western tea lovers - salt.
The stringent rules
of Lu Yu's tea making seem at odds with the modern western notion of a quick
cuppa, but in some ways they are not so different. Lu Yu was concerned that tea
should be made in an atmosphere of tranquility and the drinking of it should
create still greater tranquility. Most modern British tea drinkers would agree
that the familiar act of making tea can be calming at times of stress - and
that the drink itself can enhance that feeling of tranquility. We may not need
24 implements, nor have to draw our water from mountain streams, but a nice cup
of tea is still a good way to enjoy a moment's peace.
Lu Yu's book was certainly influential in his homeland, China, but it
was most avidly read in Japan.There it helped form the basis for the
development of the Japanese Tea Ceremony (Cha-no-yu), a ritual that has raised
the preparation and drinking of tea to an art form that still flourishes today.
Tea was probably introduced to Japan in the eighth century by a Chinese priest,
and for some years the practice of tea drinking remained the preserve of
Buddhist priests. In 1191 a Zen Buddhist monk named Eisai arrived from studying
in China bringing new seeds, and introduced the tea ceremony. The ceremony was
based on the tea-drinking rituals of Zen Buddhist monks in China, who believed
tea's properties as a stimulant were an aid to meditation. This started a
revival in tea drinking, and Eisai went on to write the first Japanese book on
tea, the Kitcha-Yojoki, or Book of Tea Sanitation.
Gradually tea
drinking became popular outside religious circles, and the Tea Ceremony came to
be regarded as the quintessential expression of social sophistication and
elegance.As with the tea preparation and drinking described by Lu Yu, the
Ceremony is about much more than just making a hot beverage. The Taoist idea of
trying to find beauty in the world was combined with the Zen Buddhist belief
that the mundane and particular were of equal importance with the spiritual and
universal. Thus the ritual of tea making expressed the quest of greatness in
the smallest details of life, and the formalised acts of graciousness and
politeness that are integral to the Ceremony are an outward form of an inner
belief in the importance of peace and harmony.
This did not happen overnight though, and early tea ceremonies in Japan
were often quite boisterous affairs that could include gamblingand
the consumption of alcohol. But the ceremonies gradually became more and more
refined, in large part due to the personalities and influences and three Tea
Masters. The last of these, Sen No Rikyu (1522 - 1591), lived for much of his
life in Kyoto, where he studied Zen. It was Rikyu who incorporated the essence
of Zen into the Tea Ceremony, and it is in the form he developed the Way of Tea
(chado) that is practised through the Tea Ceremony to this day. Rikyu himself
became the personal Tea Master of the powerful political leader Hideyoshi and
was his chief aide, but the close relationship between the two men broke down,
perhaps because other men jealous of Rikyu conspired to turn Hideyoshi against
him. Eventually Rikyu was obliged by Hideyoshi to commit ritual suicide
(seppuku), a more honourable death than being executed. Despite this sad end,
Rikyu's sons and grandsons continued to practice the Way of Tea. Today the
Urasenke Tea tradition (the largest of the various different Ways of Tea) is
headed by grandmaster Zabosai Sen Soshitsu XVI, the sixteenth generation of
direct descendants of Riyku to hold this position.
A very formal Ceremony, based on Rikyu's teachings, would take place in
a specially built tea room (Sukiya) - usually a small wooden structure with a
sloping roof, built with immense care. There is also an anteroom (midsuya)
where the tea utensils and washed and arranged, a portico (machiai) where
guests wait untilsummoned to the tea room, and a path through the garden (roji)
which connects the two. Inside, the tea room is simple and spare in design, in
emulation of a Zen Buddhist monastery.
The walk through
the garden to the tea room is the first stage of meditation and breaks the
connection with the outside world. Guests are expected to approach silently in
order of precedence - samurai warriors were obliged to leave their swords on a
rack outside - before bending to enter the tea room through a low door, an act
intended to imbue the guests with a sense of humility. The guests then look at
the ornaments and the flower arrangement and the tea caddy and kettle before
taking their seats. The host then enters from the anteroom, makes a formal
greeting, which is returned by the head guest, and proceeds to make the tea.
The preparation and receiving of the tea is subject to numerous rituals and
uses various different implements, and would doubtless meet with Lu Yu's
approval!
But not all
ceremonies are so rigid. Tea is practised throughout Japan by people from all
walks of life, who have usually learnt it a their local tea club. It is thus a
very social activity, and one in which participation by the guests is
crucial.Although some Ceremonies are held on special occasion and are very
formal and private, others are open to anyone who would like to buy and ticket,
and so they are often held as fund-raising or charity events. Nonetheless,
there is still an emphasis on harmony, respect, purity and calm. Within its
formality is the belief that rigidity and structure can in some senses be
liberating and meditative - that freedom and beauty can be found within a
strict form - which is at odds with the contemporary western notion that
formalism can only restrict art.
It should be remembered that the Tea Ceremony is as far removed from
everyday methods of tea making in Japan as afternoon tea at the Ritz is from a
cuppa from a flask on a construction site in England. It is more like the
old-fashioned English tea party, with the hostess using the best china and
serving the best snacks, and polite chit-chat being made. Even now though most
tea lovers in Britain have their own rituals - the first cup of the day, the
favourite mug, the method of stirring, tea first or milk first
- which still illustrate the comfort and peace that can be found in the
familiar act of making the perfect cup of tea.
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