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A Journey to the Tea Countries of China

Including Sung-Lo and the Bohea Hills; with a Short Notice of the East India Company's Tea Plantations...

Robert Fortune

$71.95

Paperback

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English
Cambridge University Press
26 April 2012
'My object is to give a peep into the Celestial Empire, to show its strange hills and romantic valleys, its rivers and canals … and its strange and interesting people.' Robert Fortune (1813–80), the author of several books on China, was a keen botanist. He first went to China for the Royal Horticultural Society, but soon returned on behalf of the East India Company in order to collect tea specimens for the British government's plantations in the Himalayas. In this entertaining account, first published in 1852, Fortune includes stories of how he disguised himself in Chinese clothes to gain access to districts barred to Europeans, of watching farmers sail in what seemed to be wash-tubs, and the bizarre dyeing process that saw large quantities of Prussian Blue and gypsum poured into green tea. Full of panoramic descriptions and engaging anecdotes, this book is ideal for historians and modern-day travellers alike.

By:  
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 24mm
Weight:   540g
ISBN:   9781108046411
ISBN 10:   110804641X
Series:   Cambridge Library Collection - Travel and Exploration in Asia
Pages:   428
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface; 1. Arrive at Hong-kong; 2. My object in coming north; 3. Leave Hang-chow-foo; 4. City of Wae-ping; 5. Sung-lo-shan; 6. My reception in the house of Wang's father; 7. Kingtang or Silver Island; 8. Foo-chow-foo; 9. Leave Ning-po for the Bohea Mountains; 10. City of Chang-shan and its trade; 11. Town of Hokow; 12. First view of the Bohea Mountains; 13. Woo-e-shan; 14. Stream of 'nine windings'; 15. Some advice to the reader; 16. Geography of the tea-shrub; 17. Inn at Pouching-hien; 18. A celebrated Buddhist temple; 19. Tea-plants, etc., taken to Hong-kong; 20. Safe arrival of tea-plants in India; 21. Experiments with tea-seeds; 22. Ordered to inspect the tea-plantations in India.

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