Zhou Dynasty (BC 1046-BC 256)
The history of Pu-erh tea is very long. As early as
3,000 years ago, during the period of Emperor Wu's slashing, the Yunnan tea
ancestors had already offered tea to Zhou emperor Wu, but at that time there
was no name for Pu-erh tea. The transitional ancient tea tree of Bangwei is a
living fossil left by the ancient monks who cultivated domesticated tea trees.
Tang Dynasty (618-907)
In the historical literature, the earliest person who
planted Pu-erh tea was Tang Yuchuo, who wrote in the book "The Book of the
Seven" in the book, "The tea is out of the mountains of the silver
city, and there is no harvest." Jiang Guihe cooks and drinks."
According to the test, Yinshengcheng's tea should be Yunnan big leaf tea, which
is Pu-erh tea. According to historical records, as early as more than 1,100
years ago, it was in the area of Sipu District of Nannuo, “the mountains of Yinshengchengjie”, and it was
rich in tea.
Song and Yuan Dynasties (960- 1368)
In the Song Dynasty, Li Shi also recorded in his book "Continuing recording
things": "The tea is silver and the mountains are born, and it is timeless, and the
chowder is cooked and consumed." From the cognition of tea culture history,
tea is in the Tang Dynasty. It flourished in the Song Dynasty.
In the Yuan Dynasty, there was a place called "Step by Step". Since it was later
written as a Chinese character, it became "Puer" (at the time "the ear" had no
three points of water). The word Pu-erh is the first to see this.
Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1912)
In the Wanli period of the Ming Dynasty, Xie Yuzhe mentioned the word "Pucha"
(ie Pu-erh tea) in his book "The Strategy". The book said: "The gentry used it,
all the Pu tea, steamed into a group." This is the first time that the word "Pucha"
has appeared in the text. In the Ming Dynasty, Li Shizhen’s "Compendium of
Materia Medica" also recorded the "Pu-erh tea out of Yunnan Pu-erh".
The Qing Dynasty Fufu "Pu-erh Tea": "Pu'an is a silver-born house. The use of
Pu-erh in the Western Buddhism has been since the Tang Dynasty." Qing
Daoguang "Pu-erh House" "Six Tea Mountain Relics", more than 1,700 years
ago During the Three Kingdoms period, tea was planted in the territory of
Pu-erh Prefecture.
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