10 Fascinating Facts about the History of Tea in Britain

középfok
Ebben a cikkben 10 érdekes tényt olvashatsz a brit teázási szokásokról. Te szereted a teát?

Tea’s rise in popularity in Britain coincided with a flowering of intellectual and creative thought that we call the Enlightenment.

By the middle of the 18th century, tea had replaced ale & gin as the people’s favorite beverage.

Is tea a magical elixir?

You decide as we look at 10 fascinating facts about the history of tea in Britain.

1. Tea was first offered in London coffeehouses in 1657

Opposite the Royal Exchange on Cornhill, there is an entrance to a network of alleyways called Change Alley (formerly known as Exchange Alley).

It was down these narrow alleys that the mercantile class of London would meet to discuss business in coffeehouses.

Nestled beside makers of fine wands, there was something else magical for sale: tea.

The owner of one establishment created a pamphlet and advertisement to explain the new beverage as an early form of health drink:

“That Excellent, and by all Physicians approved, China drink, called by the Chinese, Tcha, by other nations Tay alias Tee, …sold at the Sultaness-head, ye Cophee-house in Sweetings-Rents, by the Royal Exchange, London.”

How did the introduction of tea impact the city of London? It became the most powerful city in the world for 200 years.

Today, London vies with New York as the world’s most influential city.

2. Samuel Pepys wrote about drinking tea in 1660

Samuel Pepys first tasted tea in 1660, pre-dating Catherine of Braganza’s arrival in Britain, and recorded the experience in his diary of 25 September:

“I did send for a cup of tee, (a China drink) of which I had never had drunk before.”

Samuel Pepys (1633 – 1703) was an English Member of Parliament and naval administrator who is famous for keeping a detailed diary for a decade as a young man. His work as Chief Secretary to the Admiralty would help position Britain’s Royal Navy as the world’s most powerful in years to come.

3. A Portuguese Princess made tea popular in Britain

Although Catherine didn’t actually introduce tea into Britain, she was instrumental in making it fashionable. Her use of tea as a court beverage, rather than a medicinal drink, influenced its popularity in literary circles.

Queens, a borough of New York City, is thought to be named after Catherine of Braganza since she was queen when Queens County was established in 1683.

4. These could be the earliest British directions on how to make tea

In 1672, Edward Herbert, 3rd Baron Herbert of Chirbury sent directions for tea making, and warming the delicate cups, to Shropshire:

“The directions for the tea are: a quart of spring water just boiled, to which put a spoonful of tea, and sweeten to the palate with candy sugar. As soon as the tea and sugar are in, the steam must be kept in as much as may be, and let it lie half or quarter of an hour in the heat of the fire but not boil. The little cups must be held over the steam before the liquid be put in.”

5. Tea may have been instrumental to the English Enlightenment

It was a summer afternoon in 1665 and Sir Isaac Newton was taking tea under the apple trees in the family gardens at Woolsthorpe Manor in Lincolnshire, England.

By chance, an apple fell from an overhanging branch, hitting him on the head and sparking the “a-ha” moment for his law of gravitation.

Whether precisely true or not, is it a coincidence that a flowering of intellectual thinking in Britain occurred at around the same time that tea was fast becoming the nation’s favorite drink?

By 1720, black tea had overtaken green tea in popularity and was generally taken with milk and sugar.

Could this magical potion be the brain stimulant of Newton, Locke, and Hobbes?

6. Did tea power the British Industrial Revolution?

Not only was tea powering the massive minds of some of history’s greatest thinkers, but some scholars suggest that tea played a key role in the British Industrial Revolution.

The stimulants in the tea, coupled with the extra energy from sugar and milk would act like today’s energy drinks and give workers a boost—helping them work longer hours.

Even today, “builder’s tea” is a favorite for anyone doing physically strenuous work as part of their job. A colloquial term for strong tea, builder’s tea is typically brewed in a mug, always has milk, and two (or more) teaspoons of sugar.

Furthermore, because water has to be boiled for tea, water-borne diseases like dysentery, cholera, and typhoid were killed.

7. Chelsea porcelain manufactory produced the first British teaware

Fashionable 17th-century tea drinkers used small porcelain tea bowls that were sometimes shipped with the tea itself.

Established in 1743, the Chelsea porcelain manufactory produced the first successful porcelain equipages and were quickly imitated.

During the 1770s and 1780s, tea was sometimes drunk from saucers. Deeper than today’s, they were similar to the Chinese bowls of the 17th century. It is thought the practice came from Russia, where samovars kept tea very hot and strong. Pouring from cup into saucer was a quick way to cool the tea.

8. Victorian tea rooms helped women win the right to vote

During the Victorian era, tea rooms may have helped the women’s suffrage movement.

Tea rooms were popular and fashionable social gathering places, especially for women.

British historian Sir Roger Fulford argued that tea rooms provided neutral public spaces to help women strategize political campaigns.

9. Thomas Twining opened the first known tea shop in London

Thomas Twining opened the first known tea shop in 1706.

Twinings holds the world’s oldest continually-used company logo and has occupied the same premises at 216 Strand, London, since inception.

A division of Associated British Foods since 1964, Stephen Twining now represents the company’s tenth generation.

Celebrating its 300th anniversary in 2006, Twinings launched a special tea and associated tea caddies.

Appointed by HM The Queen, Twining’s is a Royal Warrant holder.

10. Take a tea break—it’s the law!

In a working shift of six hours, British workers have the right in law to a minimum of a 20-minute break.

Described in government guidelines as “a tea or lunch break”, it is sometimes called “elevenses”, because 11 am is a good time to take a break, leaving two hours before the traditional lunchtime of 1 pm.

In Britain, where there is tea, there are usually biscuits too—it’s really hard to have one without the other.

Dunking biscuits in a “cuppa” (cup of tea) is a custom that Brits have exported around the globe.

McVitie’s biscuits are the most popular biscuits in the UK to “dunk” in tea, with McVitie’s chocolate digestives, Rich tea and Hobnobs ranked the nation’s top three favorites.

source: britainandbritishness.com

Tea fun facts. Can you answer the questions?

1. When and where were tea bags invented?

2. How many major tea types are there?

3. What is rooibos tea made from?

4. Who was Earl Grey tea named after?

5. When is traditional English tea served?

Key

1. They were invented in the US by Thomas Sullivan. He created the small silk bags to give samples to his customers. The customers thought that the bags were supposed to be put directly into the water, thus the tea bags were created by accident.

2. There are four major tea types: black, green, white and oolong.

3. It’s a herbal tea made from a plant growing in South Africa.

4. It was named after a 19th century British diplomat to China.

5. It’s served between 3-6 p.m. The later it is served the more substantial food is offered to it.

Vocabulary

popularity

népszerűség

to coincide with

egybeesni

flowering

virágzás

Enlightenment

Felvilágosodás

ale

világos sör

beverage

ital

magical

varázslatos

entrance

bejárat

network

hálózat

narrow

keskeny

mercantile

kereskedői

to nestle

elhelyezkedik, hozzásimul

wand

pálca, vessző

pamphlet

röpirat

to impact

hatással lenni valamire

to vie

versenyezni, versengeni

influential

befolyásos

experience

élmény, megtapasztalás

diary

napló

naval

tengerészeti

decade

évtized

admiralty

admiralitás, tengernagyi hivatal

to be instrumental in

jelentős szerepe van

literarycircles

irodalmi körök

borough

kerület

to establish

alapítani

delicate

finom, kényes

quart

kvart, negyed gallon

spring water

forrásvíz

to boil

felforralni

a spoonful of

kanálnyi

to sweeten

édesíteni

to the palate

ízlés szerint

steam

gőz

liquid

folyadék

by chance

véletlenül

overhanging

lelógó

branch

faág

precisely

teljesen, igazán

coincidence

véletlen egybeesés

to occur

feltűnni, megjelenni

to overtake

megelőzni

stimulant

stimuláns, élénkítő

scholar

tudós

key role

kulcsszerep

Industrial Revolution

Ipari Forradalom

boost

lökés, élénkítés

strenuous

kimerítő

to brew

leforrázni

mug

bögre

water-borne

víz által terjesztett

dysentery

vérhas

teaware

teáskészlet

equipage

felszerelés, tartozék

to imitate

utánozni

saucer

csészealj

to cool

lehűteni

to vote

szavazni

neutral

semleges

premises

helyiség, épület

inception

kezdet

to launch

bevezetni

caddy

teásdoboz

Royal Warrant holder

királyi beszállító

shift

műszak

to dunk

mártogatni

to rank

besorolódni, rangsorolódni

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