Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The earliest dynasty in which tea sets appeared.

The earliest dynasty in which tea sets appeared.

The earliest dynasty in which tea sets appeared was the Western Han Dynasty.

In Yue Yun, Wang Bao, a ci-fu writer in the Western Han Dynasty, said that "there is everything in making tea, and the cave is hidden". ), which is the historical data that China first mentioned "tea set". In the Tang Dynasty, the word "tea set" first appeared in Tang poetry. China's tea sets, with a wide variety and beautiful appearance, not only have practical value, but also have high artistic value, so they are well-known at home and abroad and are favored by tea lovers in past dynasties.

Extended data:

"Good food is not as good as a gourmet" has always been the way people in China use it. From drinking a lot of soup to sipping slowly, human beings have experienced a certain historical stage in drinking tea. Different drinking methods naturally produce corresponding tea sets. Tea set is the most important carrier in the long history of tea culture development, which provides an important physical basis for us to interpret the tea drinking life of the ancients.

Tea originated in Yunnan, Sichuan and Guizhou in the southwest of China. Sichuan's economy was quite prosperous in Han Dynasty, and drinking tea became increasingly prominent in the life of scholars at that time. In Tongyue, Wang Bao recorded that "the tea has been cooked and the hole has been covered" and explicitly mentioned the tea set used for making tea.

Zisha tea set is still an important branch of tea set in Qing Dynasty. After the initial prosperity of the Ming Dynasty, the purple sand tea set in the Qing Dynasty once again ushered in a new creative peak. If the teapot in the Ming Dynasty was too rough, the production technology of purple sand in the Qing Dynasty was greatly improved, and the clay was delicate and the production was regular, so a famous artist like Chen Mingyuan appeared.

After Jia and Dao, scholars joined the pot-making process in succession, which greatly improved the humanistic connotation of purple sand tea sets. Chen Hongshou, one of the "Eight Schools of West Leng", cooperated with Yang Pengnian, a first-generation famous scholar, and Mansheng Pot became a model of literati pot.

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