Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Traditional cigarettes are still being smoked in this day and age.

Traditional cigarettes are still being smoked in this day and age.

Traditional cigarettes never go out of style.

Cigarettes are a type of tobacco product.

The method of production is to dry the tobacco and shredded, and then rolled in paper about 120mm long, 10mm diameter barrel-shaped strip.

Smoking is done by lighting one end of the stick and sucking the smoke from the other end.

Cigarettes were first popularized in Turkey, where people liked to roll them up in newspaper and smoke them.

During the Crimean War, British soldiers learned how to smoke from the soldiers of the Ottoman Empire at the time, and it spread to different places.

Tobacco is not the only ingredient in most cigarettes.

Sailing sailors brought tobacco seeds back to Portugal in 1558, and they spread throughout Europe.

In 1612, John Rolfe, an English colonial official, planted tobacco on a large scale in Jamestown, Virginia, and began trading in it.

Tobacco was introduced to China in the mid-16th century.

The beginning of the importation was sun-dried tobacco, which has been cultivated for more than 400 years.