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Tea cakes made in an effort to imitate tea cake forming as described in the Cha jing
Session 16: Tang China ④: Tea practices
Topics
◊ Tea cultivation, crafting, preparation, consumption, trade during the Tang dynasty
      
Thoughts—read before class, revisit for tests
Most of the content of this lecture is based on Evans, Tea in China. The comments on cultivation are probably fairly accurate. He says they are based on the Si Shi Zuan Yao (四時纂要). This is a Tang dynasty agricultural work. As an historical document its provenance is pretty solid but it is difficult to tell whether Evans uses it directly or via secondary (Western language) scholarship that summarizes passages.
This lecture is not as on-point with regard to the themes of this course; rather, it tries to give some historical details along the "tea basics" component of this course. I have not marked this topic as a study topic for exams, however, I do this the below key points are important enough to warrant possible inclusion of exams:
Regarding cultivation, techniques are improved and stimulated by Tang state policy (for increased production) and imperial tribute tea.
Regarding crafting, leaves are steam-heated (a type of kill-green process but probably not sophisticated) then mashed, to make tea cakes. These are pierced, sun-dried to some extent, the oven-dried, then stored. This "wet" heating process differs from most Chinese approaches now, but is similar to Japan processing.
Overall, if I would link this to the main topic of the course (history of culture of tea), I think the best way to look at consider how Tang Buddhist practices and the growth of Buddhism in general,Tang imperial sponsorship of tea cultivation, Tang international trade practices, Lu Yu's Cha jing, and technical advances in agriculture and tea cuisine of the time interact to move tea culture far forward.
Required—to be completed for today's session
✓ There is no required reading; however, attendance is recommended since most of this information is accessible only through the lecture.
Multimedia notes
❖ None.
Links
⇢ This article (via MUSE) discusses the role of women in cultivating tea: "Beyond the Paradigm: Tea-picking Women in Imperial China" (Weijing Lu, 2004). It is not exclusively about Tang dynasty practices but includes them.
Other
 In preparing this lecture I came across this interesting Wiki Tang Dynasty comment: "Although wrapping paper had been used in China since the 2nd century BC, during the Tang Dynasty the Chinese were using wrapping paper as folded and sewn square bags to hold and preserve the flavor of tea leaves." This cites a work with an appealing title: Joseph Needham, Science and Civilization in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 1, Paper and Printing, Taipei: Caves Books 1986. Just sharing.
        
Links to each session page
Sun, Sept 1, 2013: I am migrating this site to a new site. It takes time. During this transition, there are two ways to access a particular day's web page. You can start with the new EA109 Fall 2013 Course Guide page, our official top page. It will take you directly to the new pages and redirect to old pages when necessary. Or you can use the below chart. It will take you directly to the day's session page—the new one when it exists, the old one when it has yet to be migrated. Greenhighlight means the new page exists. Sorry for the dust and mess during construction!
Aug 30, F S01
     Sep 4, W S02
     Sep 6, F S03
     Sep 9, M S04
     Sep 11, W S05
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     Sep 16, M S07
     Sep 18, W S08
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     Sep 23, M S10
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Sep 27, F S12
     Sep 30, M S13
     Oct 2, W S14
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     Oct 7, M S16
     Oct 9, W S17
     Oct 11, F S18-Midterm
     Oct 14, M S19
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     Oct 21, M S22
   
Oct 23, W S23
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     Oct 28, M S25
     Oct 30, W S26
     Nov 1, F S27
     Nov 4, M S28-Midterm
     Nov 6, W S29
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     Nov 18, M S33
     Nov 20, W S34
   
Nov 22, F S35
     Nov 25, W S36
     Nov 27, F S37
     Dec 2, M S38-Midterm
     Dec 4, W S39
     Dec 6, F S40
     Dec 9, M (RRR)
     Dec 11, W (RRR)
     Dec 13, F (RRR)
Dec 19 3-6PM, Th FINAL