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Enjoy Tea-time

An old man drinking tea in a teahouse in Chengdu.
 The word Teahouse stemmed from Ming Dynasty and became common after Qing Dynasty. Except for that, there are also other names like tea building, tea mill, tea shop, tea garden, tea room, etc. It is a special location for people to drink tea, relax and have fun. It is also an epitome of two kinds of tea cultures of China, one upscale and the other folksy.

 

    The predecessor of teahouse is tea stand. A myth novel has it that an old lady in Western Jin(265-316)sold tea in the market every day.

The host's interest of a tea house can often influence guests'.
Buyers Came and went nonstop from dawn to dusk, but the lady's tea never decreased. Teahouse in its real sense was born in Tang Dynasty and blossomed in Song Dynasty and continued devel oping in Ming and Qing dynasties. This developing journey of teahouse is quite similar to that of tea itself. After l960's. teahouse almost disappeared.  It met its renaissance only till the reform and opening up policy of l978. Now in maw cities of China teahouse runs neck and neck with cafes. It is an appealing place for the young and indicates a fashionable lifestyle.

 

    During its long history of development, Chinese tea culture develops different characteristics and contains two sides of connotations; the upscale and the folksy, For the upscale side, men of letters or several close friends got together. They either cooked tea near a lovely well or on a rock, or tasted tea in a dense forest or among straight bamboos, reciting poems and verses at the same time. As to the folksy side, tea held a different meaning for common plebeians. Men of letters thought sip was the essence of tea drinking while large gulp spoiled the charm of it.

 

    Song Dynasty was the golden time for Chinese tea culture, when teahouse existed  everywhere in city and even carried its way to vill

A corner of an elegant tea house.
age, almost the same quantity as restaurants. To beat others, every teahouse beat its brains to attract customers. First, it put great efforts in decoration, Teahouses of Song Dynasty were almost all decorated golden, lacquered, elegant and tidy, with flowers and calligraphic works or paintings of celebrities within. Some teahouses set up shelves to put rare plants to draw customers attention. After Qing Dynasty, with the introduction of Western culture, teahouses took on some new features as well. Some luxurious western-styled teahouse also came into being. Some teahouses were situated in picturesque suburb, under a melon pavilion Or bean shed£¬in a grape garden or near a pool.

 

In Summer, they added heat-dispelling medicines and sold sweetened bean paste, Coconut wine, bittern  plum water, pawpaw juice, and other beverages. The choice of tea apparatus was more and more particular too. New varieties invented by various teahouses were kept in exquisite porcelain bottles, Set on fed-lacquer plates, and placed in the most eye-catching spot in the teahouse, becoming a second signboard. Some teahouses used little pretty tin pot, red. clay oven and charcoal fire to stew rain water, and cooked West Lake Longjing and other fame tea. Teahouses also employed professionals to take charge of cooking tea, who were called "tea doctor, To gain customers, teahouses usually introduced some entertainments. Some teahouses hired geishas and musical band to play music or sing songs; some acted as a school an

Tea House is an important place for leisure in modern city.
d taught music fans how to play and sing; Some provided chess, Chinese chess, and conundrums, functioning 1ike an arena of intelligence.

 

    Teahouse also played an indelible role for opera. Some even say that 770pera is an art irrigated by tea juice."Teahouse was not only a place for storyteller to show his talent, but also a stage for opera performance. At the end of l921 century, Zha Family Teahouse and Guanghe Teahouse of Beijing, Dan Gui Tea Garden and Tian Xian Tea Garden of Shanghai Were well known locations for opera performance. Teahouse owner paid the troupe at first. Audience entered without tickets, only paying for the tea. Even theatres for opera alone often offered tea to audience. Some even were named  as Teahouse. Opera had a special costume called "Tea Clothes,"featured in blue blouse, big collar, and half length. This kind of clothes was first known as teahouse work  garment, but later if became symbol of the whole working class. Most playwrights in the past loved drinking tea, of whom the famous playwright Tang Xianzu(1550-1616) of Ming Dynasty was a representative. He named his house "Jade Tea Hall" and the  dramatic school he started was consequently called School of jade Tea Hall. The spirit of tea has been rooted in opera. In south China, an opera is directly named after tea as "Tea Picking Opera," telling stories through songs and dances. This opera has its earliest embryo in the folksongs and dances performed in tea picking activities.

The tea house with the style of combining Chinese and western cultures.

 

    Teahouse was not always noisy. Some "Simple Tea House" was featured in its simplicity and quietness. Some teahouses set Special private rooms or sanctums to satisfy customers7 different requirements. For this reason, businessmen and officials used to take teahouses as places for discussion or negotiation, and many trades and policies were decided this way. In Some regions of Sichuan Province, there used to be a custom of ¡°drink talking tea?¡¯ In times of civil disputation on house, land or marriage, plebeians would not take the trouble to appeal to local authorities, but preferred to ask someone to mediate,This was called ¡°drink talking tea".

 

    The disappearance of teahouse in ancient China was the result of developed commodity economy. In Song Dynasty-the time of teahouse¡¯s  prosperity, the population of capital Bianliang (today¡¯s Kaifeng of He¡¯nan Province)reached 260,000 at one time.

 

    Teahouse was a micro world where people of all walks gath

The tea houses stressing cultural atmosphere.
ered. In addition, Tea house didn't have a time limit, so the advantage of longtime sitting naturally made it the center of information collection and distribution. Tea doctor in a teahouse was the most informative man. Had one had anything to ask, he was the right guy to go to. A noblewoman in Song Dynasty lost her cat, so she had hundreds of pictures of the cat painted and posted in all major teahouses like today's notice of ¡°Lost¡± in newspaper.The tea-loving Chinese writer Laoshe wrote a famous play Teahouse. Based  on the ups and downs of a teahouse, the play demonstrated a half-century social turbulence from l898 to 1945, vividly depicting a picture of all kinds of people living in a troubled time. Teahouse is written in l956. With less than 50,000 words, it covers rich social contents, covering more than 70 characters, 50 of whom have names or nicknames.

 

 These characters include figures of high positions, underdogs at the bottom of social ladder, boss and lads in teahouses, favored eunuchs, despicable pimps and scouring, entrepreneurs who believe in saving China through industry, old and new secret agents and hatchet men, storytellers physiognomists, deserters, and kind-hearted workmen, embracing almost all levels of the society. Teahouse is divided into three scenes

The tea houses stressing cultural atmosphere.
each taking place at a different time. The play doesn¡¯t utilize massive historic scenes, but uses different characters' fortune to refract the vicissitude of the entire society. All activities are confined within the teahouse too, which, like a mirror,displays one by one the diverse human beings. in view of this, Laoshe took much pain to describe the teahouse, through which he delineated the peculiar teahouse culture of China. For instance, at that time people could buy snacks like ¡°mixed meat noodle¡±, teahouse was not merely for tea drinking, either, but was a public place for intercommunication; customers could bring tea leaves themselves and frequenters could buy on credit; storyteller and teahouse were in an interdependent relation, and so forth.

 

    Though teahouse reflects the two sides of tea culture, it more often than not appears as a representative of the folksy side. Though it was in high fashion for a period, it was still low and cheap in the eyes of scholars and bureaucrats. Moreover, the trend of pure tea advocated by scholars went against the general practice of teahouse's adding condiments in tea. After Ming Dynasty, with teahouse's getting more and more elegant, it was gradually accepted by scholars£¬and some well known tea experts resorted there. A lot of senior Officials liked going to teahouse£¬and the idle

The people who like tea have lessor more a peaceful and tranquil mood when tasting tea.
youngsters of the Eight Banners(an establishment of army in early Qing Dynasty)took teahouse as the best place for killing time. Emperor Qianlong built a royal teahouse; "Mutual Joy Garden" in the Garden of Perfection and Light, meaning to enjoy with all civilians. In times of New Year, Mutual Joy Garden opened trade streets which resembled commercial Streets of Common people, with shops, restaurants, teahouses and the like on each side. Even the peddling shout Wag imitated quite true to life. The regal family of Qing Dynasty enjoyed folk fun here, and in this way teahouse climbed its way from public Streets to palaces.

 

     Walking in street in China today, you will find all kinds of teahouse everywhere. They either take the form of south-China gardens with bridge and pool, kiosk and pavilion, meandering path and flowers, and arch and corridor, or they imitate country taverns to pursue pastoral rustic charm, or take up a modern style designed and decorated to be vigorous and fashionable. Teahouse today has become a symbol of taste and is considered as part of fashion. Entering these teahouses, you can hear melodious and relaxing music and smell distant tea fragrance.

 

     Teahouse provides chess, poke and other entertainments. You can also order snacks or fast food when hungry, Teahouse continues to play an important role in the life of Chinese people. Nowadays Chinese teahouse is often called it Tea Art House", where ladies perform different styles of Chinese tea ceremony for customers, so teahouse serves to revive the traditional culture of China.

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