From Legend to Science: the Health Benefits of Tea Throughout the world, tea and coffee rival each other as mankind's most popular brewed beverages. For thousands of years, however, tea has had one great advantage over coffee: it is believed to have a wide range of medicinal properties. In his book, Tea in China, John C. Evans states that áçif tea had not possessed a medical reputation, the beverage we know today might never have existed.áè (Evans 19) Research in fact proves that tea owes its reputation as much to its health benefits as to its taste, and this has been true, since tea made its first appearance in ancient China more than two thousand years ago.
No one is sure where and when tea was first brewed; stories about tea's origins are more myth than reality. One story tells that a legendary Chinese leader and medical expert, Sheng Nong, discovered tea as a medicinal herb in 2737 B.C.
One day while he was boiling water under a tea tree, some tea leaves fell into Sheng's pot of boiling water. After drinking some tea, he discovered its miraculous powers and immediately placed tea on his list of medicinal herbs.
John Blofeld, in Chinese Art of Tea, writes that áçit can be confidently stated that tea was known in the three kingdoms epoch (AD 222-277).áè More importantly, however, áçtea [was] originally drunk for its medicinal properties.áè (Blofeld 4) Evans links the early popularity of tea to Taoist religious practices during the Qin Dynasty (201 áV 207 B.C.). áçTaoists in particular became obsessed by long life and an Elixir of Life became a Taoist ideal. For Taoists the Elixir of Life was believed to be tea.áè (Evans 20) Almost every writer who records the history of tea notes that it was...
Hmm
Very messed up. You should look through it and remove some messed up things that occurs when you copy and paste!
Otherwise a good and informative essay.
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