中国茶的历史(英文版) 怎么样可以弄到英文版的中国茶文化,西方茶文化以及茶历史的书

chinese tea \u7684\u82f1\u6587\u6587\u7ae0\uff0c\u4ecb\u7ecd\u4e2d\u56fd\u7684\u8336\u6587\u5316\uff01\u6025\uff01

\u8336\u6765\u81ea\u4e2d\u56fd\uff0c\u4e2d\u56fd\u4eba\u79cd\u8336\u996e\u8336\u5df2\u67094000\u591a\u5e74\u7684\u5386\u53f2\u4e86\u3002\u8bf4\u5230\u8336\u7684\u79cd\u7c7b\uff0c\u79cd\u7c7b\u771f\u662f\u591a\u554a\uff0c\u7279\u522b\u662f\u9f99\u4e95\u8336\u4eab\u8a89\u4e16\u754c\u3002\u559d\u8336\u7528\u7684\u8336\u676f\uff0c\u8336\u58f6\u4e00\u822c\u662f\u7528\u9676\u74f7\u505a\u7684\u3002\u559d\u8336\u53ef\u4ee5\u5728\u5f88\u591a\u5730\u65b9\u559d\uff0c\u50cf\u9910\u9986\u3001\u5bb6\u91cc\u3001\u4e0a\u73ed\u4f11\u606f\u7684\u65f6\u5019\u3002\u4f46\u5728\u8336\u9986\u559d\u662f\u6700\u6709\u610f\u5883\u7684\u3002\u559d\u8336\u8fd8\u6709\u5f88\u591a\u597d\u5904\uff0c\u50cf\u6709\u5229\u4e8e\u5065\u5eb7\uff0c\u9192\u8111\u63d0\u795e\uff0c\u7eff\u8336\u8fd8\u9632\u764c\u3002\u8336\u6587\u5316\u5386\u53f2\u60a0\u4e45\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u8981\u628a\u5b83\u4f20\u627f\u4e0b\u53bb\u3002
Tea from China, Chinese tea drinking tea has 4000 years of history. When it comes to the types of tea, is really more species, especially longjing tea is famous in the world. Cup of tea, tea POTS are usually made of ceramic. Tea can be drunk in many places, such as restaurants, home, work and rest. But in the teahouse to drink is one of the most artistic conception. Tea has many benefits, like healthy, refreshing refreshing, green tea is also a preventive against cancer. Tea culture has a long history, we have to pass it on.

\u5230\u7ef4\u57fa\u767e\u79d1\u641c"\u8336\u6587\u5316" , \u767e\u5ea6\u5c4f\u853d\u8be5\u7f51\u7ad9\u94fe\u63a5 , \u6240\u4ee5\u53ea\u80fd\u4f60\u81ea\u5df1\u641c\u4e86.
\u70b9\u5f00\u641c\u5230\u7684\u76f8\u5173\u94fe\u63a5\u540e,\u9875\u9762\u5de6\u4e0b\u6709\u82f1\u6587\u94fe\u63a5

Tea – in Legend and HistoryThe actual origin of tea, as a drink, is not recorded in history, only in legend, but it is certain that it began in ancient China over 5,000 years ago. The story goes that an early Emperor named Shen Nung was visiting a distant part of his realm one day when serendipity caused a discovery that would spread in popularity all over the world.
Emperor Shénnóng Shen Nung was said to be an excellent ‘creative’ ruler – a scientist and a patron of the arts. He was certainly well ahead of his time and in the interests of hygiene he commanded that all drinking water should be boiled. While on a visit to the extremities of his realm, he and the court stopped to rest. In accordance with his ruling the servants were busy boiling the drinking water when leaves from a nearby bush blew across the landscape and fell into the water and infused. As a scientist, the Emperor was interested in this new brown liquid and having drunk some, found it very refreshing – and so, according to this narrative, tea was born.
All the Tea in ChinaFor thousands of years, ‘tea culture’ spread throughout Chinese life and philosophy and every area of society, but it was not until 800 A.D. that the scholar Lu Yu wrote the first definitive book on the subject, which was called the Ch'a Ching (Book of Tea). Lu Yu was an orphan raised by Buddhist monks in one of China's finest monasteries. He was both a rebel and a skilled observer who achieved acclaim as a performer. Later, for a period of five years he became a recluse, withdrawing into seclusion and using his vast experience of events and places in ancient China to log the various methods of tea cultivation and preparation. This huge project caught the attention of the Emperor, who gave him patronage. Lu Yu’s work was deeply influenced by his Zen Buddhist upbringing and he almost achieved sainthood in his lifetime. It was this influence that brought Zen Buddhism and tea drinking together.
The Japanese ‘Tea Ceremony’ The value of tea for enhancing religious mediation in China was noticed by the Japanese Buddhist priest Yeisei, who took the first seeds back with him to Japan. He was thereafter known throughout Japan as the ‘Father of Tea’. The subtly captivating qualities of Tea were well received among members of the royal court, various monasteries and other sections of Japanese society. Since that time, tea in Japan has always been associated with Zen Buddhism.
The Japanese Tea CeremonyTea’s presence as an aid to the calmer side of religious fervour made its transformation into philosophy and art an easy path. The Japanese Tea Ceremony was created, otherwise known as: ‘Cha-no-yu’ which translates as ‘the hot water for tea’. The Tea Ceremony required years of training and practice, even though "the whole art, signifies no more than the making and serving of a cup of tea. The supremely important matter is that the act be performed in the most perfect, most polite, most graceful, most charming manner possible". This description was written by the journalist-historian Lafcadio Hearn, who was granted Japanese citizenship during this era.

As time went by, the original purity of the Zen and Tea concept was lost in a plethora of activity which surrounded the mystique of the heartwarming drink. These diversions included the introduction of a special form of architecture known as ‘chaseki’ for the construction of ‘tea houses’. Its concept was based on the simplicity of a forest cottage.
A group of Geishi The Geishi began to specialize in the presentation of the tea ceremony too. Soon the intrinsically simple ceremony became corrupted by unnecessary embellishment, including ‘tea tournaments’, which were flamboyantly brash affairs, held among nobles. They were completely out of harmony with the Zen philosophy surrounding tea, or even what is considered the correct ritual in teashops today for that matter.

Eventually harmony was restored through the influence of priests, who convinced the nobles that tea drinking was a calm, reflective affair – the sort of meditation aid one might use before battle. On this basis it could be seen as the ‘ultimate gift’ and was reintroduced into society and restored as a beautiful and respected ceremony.The ceremony's greatest practitioners have always been philosophers, but also artists, connoisseurs, collectors, gardeners, calligraphers, gourmets and flower-arrangers. The greatest of them, Sen Rikyu, left a tantalisingly simple set of rules: "Make a delicious bowl of tea; lay the charcoal so that it heats the water; arrange the flowers as they are in the field; in summer suggest coolness; in winter, warmth; do everything ahead of time; prepare for rain; and give to those with whom you find yourself, every consideration."
Passage to EuropeTea came to Europe slowly – at first by rumour and whispers. The first European to ‘take tea’ and document it was the Portuguese Jesuit Father Jasper de Cruz in the 1550’s, when he was a missionary visiting China. Later, the Portuguese developed a trade route and shipped tea to Lisbon. This enterprise was repeated by the Dutch, who transported it to France, Holland and beyond.

A ship of the 1650'sGreat Britain was the last of the three great sea-faring nations to benefit from the Chinese and East Indian trade routes. Tea first reached English shores between 1652 and 1654, soon proving popular enough to become the national drink – replacing ale. The following quotation by Agnes Reppiler sums this beautifully:"Tea had come as a deliverer to a land that called for deliverance; a land of beef and ale, of heavy eating and abundant drunkenness; of grey skies and harsh winds; of strong nerved , stout-purposed, slow-thinking men and women. Above all, a land of sheltered homes and warm firesides - firesides that were waiting - waiting for the bubbling kettle and the fragrant breath of tea."

Tea was very fashionable in the Dutch capital, The Hague, when the price was high and only affordable by the rich. Eventually the volume of imports grew and the price fell. By 1675 it was available in food shops throughout Holland and spread into common use in France, remaining popular there for about fifty years before coffee took over.

Meanwhile there had been a fierce debate among scholars and doctors about the benefits or otherwise of tea drinking, but nothing in this argument stopped tea becoming a way of life.

The first mention of adding milk to tea was in 1680. During that period, Dutch inns provided the first 'service of tea'. Owners would furnish guests with a portable ‘tea set’ which they would take outside with them so tea could be prepared in the tavern gardens. Tea in AmericaThe Dutch influence on the transportation of tea ensured that it reached America. It was Peter Stuyvesant (1592-1672) who took the first tea to the colonists in the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam (later re-named New York).
Peter Styvesant 1592-1672The Dutch settlers were avid tea drinkers and it was discovered at the time the English acquired the colony, that this relatively small settlement consumed more tea than all of England. Afternoon TeaThe mania for tea had swept across England soon after it had become popular in Holland and imports rose five fold between 1699 and 1708, but it was not until Anna, the Duchess of Bedford (1788-1861) decided that the "sinking feeling" she experienced in the late afternoon called for the adoption of the European idea of 'tea service' and created, what we now call ‘tea time’.She did this by inviting friends to join her for an additional summer meal at five o'clock in her rooms at Belvoir Castle. The menu was simply bread and butter sandwiches and small cakes. It proved so popular she took the idea back to London with her, and it soon caught on. Of course, the afternoon ritual was as much centred around conversation and gossip as food and drink.

Eventually, two distinct forms of tea services evolved: ‘High Tea’ and ‘Low Tea’. Low tea being served in the ‘low’ part of the afternoon and was generally served in aristocratic homes of the wealthy, featuring tea and gourmet delights – again the emphasis was on presentation and conversation. ‘High' Tea, also know as ‘Meat Tea’, was served with the main meal of the day.
The English Tea GardenThe idea of ‘Tea Gardens’ was inspired by Dutch ‘tavern garden teas’. Ladies and gentlemen took tea outdoors with entertainment and diversions, such as concerts, arbors, flowered walks, bowling greens and gambling.
A typical colonial tea gardenWomen were permitted to enter mixed public gatherings for the first time without social criticism. It was at Tea Garden events that the custom of 'tipping' was developed as a method of ensuring prompt service. In fact, each table had a small wooden box with the letters ‘T.I.P.S.’ inscribed on them. The letters stood for: ‘To Insure Prompt Service’.
cTea Gardens where highly popular in England throughout the twentieth century and although they are now somewhat scarce, they still remain popular today. Tea Rooms, Tea Courts, and Tea DancesIn the late 1880's, fine hotels in England and America began to offer ‘tea service’ in Tea Rooms and Tea Courts. Tea was served in the late afternoon to Victorian ladies and gentlemen who could meet for for tea, conversation and gossip in a socially acceptable way.
A typical tea roomBy 1910, hotels began to host Tea Dances in the afternoon as various dance crazes began to rival the obsession for tea. These were very popular among younger people who used them to meet members of the opposite sex.

  • 涓浗鑼剁殑鍘嗗彶(鑻辨枃鐗)
    绛旓細鎬! 47 2008-12-11 鎬庝箞鏍峰彲浠ュ紕鍒拌嫳鏂囩増鐨勪腑鍥借尪鏂囧寲,瑗挎柟鑼舵枃鍖栦互鍙婅尪鍘嗗彶鐨勪功 15 2011-06-12 涓浗鑼剁殑鍘嗗彶(鑻辨枃鐗) 26 2012-10-04 缁胯尪鐨勫巻鍙蹭粙缁 鑻辨枃 鍚勪綅甯府蹇欐妸銆傘傘 2 2014-03-02 鑼 涓鐗囨爲鍙剁殑鏁呬簨鑻辨枃鐗 16 2011-09-23 鏈夊叧涓浗鑼剁殑鍘嗗彶 67 2013-07-12 涓浗鑼跺彾鐨勫彂灞曞巻鍙?
  • 鍏充簬鑼舵枃鍖栫殑鑻辫浣滄枃
    绛旓細涓浗鑼浣滀负涓绉嶈壓鏈舰寮忕殑鍙戝睍鐥曡抗鐨勯瞾璞,绉颁负鍦h尪鍦涓浗鍘嗗彶涓,浣忓湪鍞愪唬鍜岃皝鍐欑殑杩欐湰涔︾殑鑼,棣栨璁鸿堪鑼跺拰鑼舵枃鍖栥鑼剁殑绮剧娓楅忓埌涓浗鏂囧寲,鍦ㄥ叏鍥芥湁寰堝绉嶇被鐨勮尪,鑼堕,鑼剁殑浼犺,鑼跺伐浠跺拰鑼朵範淇椼傜煡鍚嶇殑鍦版柟浜彈涓鏉ソ鑼跺湪涓浗鍖呮嫭鍖椾含鍑哄悕鍚勭鑼堕;绂忓缓鍜屽箍涓滀笢鍗楅儴鐪佷唤鍜屽叾浠栧湴鏂圭殑涓浗宸ュか鑼,姝e紡鐨...
  • chinese tea culture 涓浗鑼鏂囧寲鑻辨枃浠嬬粛
    绛旓細Chineseteaculture涓浗鑼鏂囧寲HistoryoftheTeaChinaistheinitialplaceofteaandalsothefistcountrytodiscovertheteatreeandmakeuseofit.Earlybacktoprimitivesociety,teahasbeenusedasmedicine.TeahasbeenfoundintherecorddocumentsofChina'Zhoudynastyabout1100BC.Peoplebegantodrinkteaintheirdailylifeandtheappearedthemarketof...
  • chinese tea culture 涓浗鑼鏂囧寲鑻辨枃浠嬬粛
    绛旓細Chineseteaculture涓浗鑼鏂囧寲HistoryoftheTeaChinaistheinitialplaceofteaandalsothefistcountrytodiscovertheteatreeandmakeuseofit.Earlybacktoprimitivesociety,teahasbeenusedasmedicine.TeahasbeenfoundintherecorddocumentsofChina'Zhoudynastyabout1100BC.Peoplebegantodrinkteaintheirdailylifeandtheappearedthemarketof...
  • 鑼剁殑鍘嗗彶鍜岀泭澶勬庝箞鐢鑻辨枃浠嬬粛?
    绛旓細鍐欎綔鎬濊矾锛氫粙缁涓浗鑼鏂囧寲鐨勫巻鍙锛屾妸鑼剁殑璧锋簮锛岃尪鐨勬枃鍖栭兘鍐欎笅鏉ャ係ince I started my major in the tea culture of ChinaI have been deeply impressed by its sophistication and beauty.I would like to share some fascinating aspects of the tea culture of China.鑷粠鎴戝紑濮嬪湪涓浗鐨鑼舵枃鍖栦笓涓氾紝...
  • 鐢鑻辫浠嬬粛涓浗鑼鏂囧寲
    绛旓細涓浗鑼鏂囧寲鏄腑鍥藉埗鑼躲侀ギ鑼剁殑鏂囧寲銆侰hina is the hometown of tea. It is said that the discovery and utilization of tea by Chinese people began in the Shennong era, at least 4700 years ago.涓浗鏄鑼剁殑鏁呬埂锛屼腑鍥戒汉鍙戠幇骞跺埄鐢ㄨ尪锛屾嵁璇村浜庣鍐滄椂浠o紝灏戣涔熸湁4700澶氬勾浜嗐俇ntil now, the ...
  • 鑼跺湪涓浗鏈変簲鍗冨勾鐨勫巻鍙茶嫳璇
    绛旓細鑼跺湪涓浗鏈変簲鍗冨勾鐨勫巻鍙缈昏瘧锛歍eahasahistoryof5000yearsinChina銆備腑鍥芥槸鑼剁殑鏁呬埂锛屽埗鑼讹紝楗尪宸叉湁鍑犲崈骞村巻鍙 Chinaisthehometownoftea,tea,teahasbeenthousandsofyearsofhistory銆傗滆尪鏂囧寲鈥濇剰涓洪ギ鑼舵椿鍔ㄨ繃绋嬩腑褰㈡垚鐨勬枃鍖栫壒寰侊紝鍖呮嫭鑼堕亾銆佽尪绮剧銆佽尪鍏枫佽尪鑹虹瓑澶氭柟闈㈠唴瀹广傝屼腑鍥戒汉楗尪鐨勫巻鍙叉嵁璇村彲杩芥函鑷崇鍐...
  • 鑼舵枃鍖鑻辨枃璧勬枡
    绛旓細涓浗鏄鑼剁殑鏁呬埂锛屼腑鍥介ギ鑼讹紝鎹濮嬩簬绁炲啘鏃朵唬锛屽皯璇翠篃鏈4700澶氬勾浜嗐傜洿鍒扮幇鍦紝姹夋棌杩樻湁姘戜互鑼朵唬绀肩殑椋庝織銆俆here are many kinds of tea made by the Han people: smoked bean tea from Taihu Lake, scented tea from Suzhou, ginger salt tea from Hunan, Xiajun tea from Shushan, frozen top ...
  • 涓浗鑼鏂囧寲鑻辨枃浠嬬粛
    绛旓細and appreciation.锛堜腑鍥芥湁鎮犱箙鐨勮尪鏂囧寲鍘嗗彶锛屽凡缁忓瓨鍦ㄤ簡鏁板崈骞淬備綔涓轰竴绉嶉ギ鍝侊紝鑼跺凡缁忓湪涓浗绀句細浜х敓浜嗛噸瑕佺殑褰卞搷锛屾垚涓轰簡涓浗鏂囧寲鐨勯噸瑕佺粍鎴愰儴鍒嗐涓浗鑼涓嶄粎浠呮槸涓绉嶉ギ鏂欙紝鑰屾槸浠h〃浜嗙儹鎯呫佸皧閲嶅拰鎰熸縺涔嬫儏銆傦級Tea culture in China is diverse, with different regions having unique tea customs and rit...
  • chinese tea 鐨鑻辨枃鏂囩珷,浠嬬粛涓浗鐨勮尪鏂囧寲!鎬!
    绛旓細鑼舵枃鍖鍘嗗彶鎮犱箙锛屾垜浠鎶婂畠浼犳壙涓嬪幓銆俆ea from China, Chinese tea drinking tea has 4000 years of history. When it comes to the types of tea, is really more species, especially longjing tea is famous in the world. Cup of tea, tea POTS are usually made of ceramic. Tea can be ...
  • 扩展阅读:中国茶文化知识大全 ... 陆羽茶经英文版 ... 中国茶文化中英文ppt ... 中国历史故事英文版 ... chinese tea culture ... 中国茶文化英语演讲稿 ... 中国茶叶网官网 ... 用英文简要介绍中国茶 ... 茶文化英语介绍100词 ...

    本站交流只代表网友个人观点,与本站立场无关
    欢迎反馈与建议,请联系电邮
    2024© 车视网