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Tea Garden on way to Rock Garden, Darjeeling India produces and consumes more tea than any other country in the world, including the famous Assam tea and Darjeeling tea. The cultivation and brewing of tea in India has a long history of applications in traditional systems of medicine and for consumption. The consumption of tea in India was first clearly documented in the Ramayana (750-500 BC). For the next 1000 years, documentation of tea in India was lost in history. Records re-emerge during the first century AD, with stories of the Buddhist monks Bodhidharma and Gan Lu, and their involvement with tea. Research shows that tea is indigenous to eastern and northern India, and was cultivated and consumed there for thousands of years. Commercial production of tea in India did not begin until the arrival of the British East India Company, at which point large tracts of land were converted for mass tea production. Today, India is one of the largest tea producers in the world, though over 70% of the tea is consumed within India itself. A number of renown teas, such as Darjeeling, also grow exclusively in India. The Indian tea industry has grown to own many global tea brands, and has evolved to one of the most technologically equipped tea industries in the world. Tea production, certification, exportation, and all other facets of the tea trade in India is controlled by the Tea Board of India.
[edit] Ancient India and the RamayanaTea cultivation in India has somewhat ambiguous origins. Though the extent of the popularity of tea in Ancient India is unknown, it is known that the tea plant was a wild plant in India that was indeed brewed by local inhabitants of different regions.[1] The first recorded reference to tea in India was in the ancient epic of the Ramayana, when Hanuman was sent to the Himalayas to bring the Sanjeevani tea plant for medicinal use. It is still unclear if Camellia can be identified with Sanjeevani.[2] It is highly unlikely that Camellia can be identified with Sanjeevani and to try and do so is a real stretch. Sanjeevani was used to bring people back from the dead, in this case Laksmana who was on verge of death. Stimulating as tea may be, it will not bring one back from the verge of real death. [edit] Dutch explorationThe next recorded reference to tea in India after the 12th century dates to 1598, when a Dutch traveler, Jan Huyghen van Linschoten, noted in a book about "the Indians ate the leaves as a vegetable with garlic and oil and boiled the leaves to make a brew."[3] The same year, another reference to tea in India was recorded, by a different group of Dutch explorers.[4] [edit] Early British surveysIn an 1877 pamphlet written by Samuel Baildon, and published by W. Newman and Co. of Calcutta, Baildon wrote, "...various merchants in Calcutta were discussing the chance of imported China seeds thriving in Assam, when a native from the province present, seeing some tea said, 'We have the plant growing wild in our jungles.'" It is then documented that the Assamese nobleman, Maniram Dutta Barua, (also known as Maniram Dewan) showed British surveyors existing fields used for tea cultivation and wild tea plants growing in the Assamese jungle.[5] [edit] East India CompanySee also: British East India Company In the early 1820s, the British East India Company began large-scale production of tea in Assam, India, of a tea variety traditionally brewed by the Singpho tribe. In 1826, the British East India Company took over the region from the Ahom kings through the Yandaboo Treaty. In 1837, the first English tea garden was established at Chabua in Upper Assam; in 1840, the Assam Tea Company began the commercial production of tea in the region, run by indentured servitude of the local inhabitants. Beginning in the 1850s, the tea industry rapidly expanded, consuming vast tracts of land for tea plantations. By the turn of the century, Assam became the leading tea producing region in the world. [6] Writing in The Cambridge World History of Food (Kiple & Ornelas 2000:715-716), Weisburger & Comer write:
[edit] Modern tea production in IndiaIndia was the top producer of tea for nearly a century, but recently China has overtaken India as the top tea producer due to increased land availability.[7] Indian tea companies have acquired a number of iconic foreign tea enterprises including British brands Tetley and Typhoo.[7] India is also the world's largest tea-drinking nation.[7] However, the per capita consumption of tea in India remains a modest 750 grams per person every year due to the large population base and high poverty levels.[7] The Cambridge World History of Food (Kiple & Ornelas 2000:715-716), writes:
[edit] References
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