The Japanese tea ceremony (茶道) is a comprehensive traditional cultural activity very influenced by Zen Buddhism, in which powdered green tea (matcha)
usually is ritually prepared and served up to participant.
A traditional tea practitioner should endeavor to truly be knowledgeable and even an expert in the full range of subjects and traditional
skills that are important to chanoyu. For instance, the making and kinds of green tea, calligraphy, kimono, arranging, ceramic cups,
and aromatic incense in addition up to his or her school traditions. As result, the systematic learning of the tea ceremony is almost infinite.
Even to take part as a visitor in a tea ceremony requires understanding of the official gestures and expressions, the right way to hold tea bowl and various desserts,
and common behavior in the tea room.
Drinking of traditional tea was begun in to southern Japan in the ninth century in the style of the freshly boiled tea by the famous
Buddhist priest Eichu, who had came back to Japan from Mainland China, where it had previously been used, according to myth, for more than a 1000 years.
Tea shortly thereafter became widely accepted in Japan, and started to be grow locally.
In the twelfth century, a different type of tea, matcha, was proposed Eisai, another Japanese cleric coming back from Mainland China.
This milled green tea, which produced from the identical plant as black tea but rather ground, was originally practiced in religious ceremony in many
Buddhist monasteries. By the thirteenth century, samurais also had started making and also drinking tea as they adopted Zen Buddhism, and the conceptual
theory of the tea ceremony were created.
In modern Japan, those who want to learn tea ceremony usually join what actually is named in Japanese as a 'circle'
which also is a common name for a party that meets frequently to take part in a such activity. There are as well tea clubs at various school, colleges and universities.
Most popular tea circles are belonging to a regional subsidiary of an already established tea school.
Sessions may be carried on at the public cultural centers, certain tea schools, or at participant's homes. Tea schools usually also have varied teams that all
learn in the same school but at separate actual times. For another good example, there may sometimes be a women's party, a group for younger or older students etc.
Calligraphy, generally in the way of hanging scrolls, takes man part in the tea ceremony. Rolls, usually written by well known calligraphers or
other Buddhist monks, are placed in the special part of the tea room. They really are chosen for their suitability for the time of year, day, or subject of the actual ceremony.
Calligraphic scrolls may also feature well known sayings, especially those normally associated with Buddhism, particularly poems,
pictures of well known places, or other words or phrases combined with tea ceremony.
More information can be found:
Japanese tea ceremony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Japanese tea ceremony is called chanoyu (茶の湯, lit. "tea hot-water") or also chadō or sadō (茶道, "the way of tea") in Japanese. It is a multifaceted traditional ...
Tea ceremony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A tea ceremony is an Asian ritualised form of making tea. The term generally refers to the Japanese tea ceremony. One can also refer to the whole set of rituals, tools, gestures ...
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