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Tea Processing in China, circa 1885—A Photographic Essay

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2011

Robert Gardella
Affiliation:
ROBERT GARDELLA is professor of history at theUnited States Merchant Marine Academy.

Extract

At the time these photographs originated in an unspecified location in late-nineteenth-century China, the Chinese had been cultivating tea (Camellia sinensis) and processing it for almost two millennia. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, after decades of false starts and ceaseless experimentation, British entrepreneurs in India and Ceylon and the Dutch in Java successfully initiated plantation cultivation, pioneered the mechanized processing of black tea, and launched vigorous advertising campaigns to foster corporate sales worldwide.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2001

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References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Etherington, Dan M. and Forster, Keith, Green Gold: The Political Economy of China's Post-1949 Tea Industry (Hong Kong, 1993)Google Scholar
Gardella, Robert, Harvesting Mountains: Fujian and the China Tea Trade, 1757–1937 (Berkeley, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pratt, James Norwood, New Tea Lover's Treasury (San Francisco, 1999)Google Scholar
Ukers, William H., All About Tea, 2 vols. (New York, 1935).Google Scholar