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The China National Tea Museum (Chinese: 中国茶叶博物馆; pinyin: Zhōngguó Cháyè Bówùguǎn) is located in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China. [1] [2] The exhibitions display tea production, and different kinds of tea. Exhibitions are in Chinese and English languages. [1]
Chinese tea culture (simplified Chinese: 中国茶文化; traditional Chinese: 中國茶文化; pinyin: zhōngguó chá wénhuà; lit. 'Chinese tea culture') includes all facets of tea (茶 chá) found in Chinese culture throughout history. Physically, it consists of tea cultivation, brewing, serving, consumption, arts, and ceremonial aspects.
Chinese tea houses refer to the public place where people gathered to drink tea and spend their spare time. Chinese tea houses have a long history. It first took shape during the Tang dynasty Kaiyuan era (713–714) [14] and became common during the Song dynasty. From the Ming and Qing dynasties, tea house culture became integral to regional ...
Yixing Clay Teapot at China Online Museum "A Handbook of Chinese Ceramics". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries. OCLC. "Zisha Teapots with National Living Treasure Zhou Gui Zhen and Zhu Jian Long". YouTube. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. video of hand making a teapot
The Ancient Tea Horse Road is a complex network of roads, of which some of the ancient tea horse roads and related historical sites in Sichuan, Yunnan and Guizhou provinces were listed as the seventh batch of China National Key Cultural Relics Protection Units [15] on 5 March 2013. There are numerous cultural heritage sites listed as National ...
The Grand Treatise on Tea (simplified Chinese: 大 观 茶 论; traditional Chinese: 大 觀 茶 論; pinyin: Dàguān Chá Lùn) [a] is a book written by the Chinese Emperor Huizong of the Song dynasty in 1107. [1] [2] Emperor Huizong was a great connoisseur of tea, with masterful skill in the art of tea ceremony. He often engaged in tea ...
China 1st-Grade National Museums. As of 2020, there are 5,788 museums in China, [1] including 3,054 state-owned museums (museums run by national and local government or universities) and 535 private museums.
Tenfu Tea Museum, in Zhangzhou, Fujian, China, was constructed in 2000, and finished in 2012.It is the world's largest tea museum [1] with a total area of 13 acres. The museum consists of many displays of past tea cultures, tea processing, tea and tea ware, as well as having live tea arts culture performances.