999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

The Departure Point of Tea Road on Sea

2009-05-28 09:53:42ByChenWeiquan
文化交流 2009年7期

By Chen Weiquan

The Time Square at Sanjiangkou, Ningbo witnessed a big fanfare on the morning of May 21st, 2009. A monument site was unveiled in commemoration of Ningbo as a departure port of the Tea Road on the Sea in ancient times. Guests from countries and regions such as Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Hong Kong and Macao attended the ceremony. The monument is composed of one main monument and four secondary monuments, a 2,000-m2 tea-leaf-shaped ship pattern, a phalanx of capstans. The memorial site occupies an area of 6,000 square meters. The principal monument stands 3 meters high and 18 meters wide, with an inscription relating history in Chinese and English.

Port and Shipbuilding

The site is at Sanjiangkou in downtown Ningbo. Sanjiangkou, in Chinese, literarily means the place where three rivers converge, though the fact is a little bit more complicated: Yao River and Fenghua River, the mother rivers of Ningbo, merge here to form Yong River. The present-day Ningbo as a city sprawls out for tens of kilometers in all directions. Over thousands of years, the city had river ports at different locations. Today, Ningbo Port is a port with many river ports and sea ports. The Jiangxia Port situated in todays Sanjiangkou was most representative of the ports in the history of Ningbo. The city was part of the territory of the Yue Kingdom and adopted the name Ningbo in the early Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Jiangxia Port came into being in the 9th century. Ningbo City therefore ranked with Yangzhou on the Yangtze River and Guangzhou in south China as most important foreign trade port cities. Tea, cotton and celadon were the major goods shipped out from Ningbo to overseas markets. That is why Ningbo is recognized as the departure port of the ancient Tea Road on the Sea.

A group of capstans in front of the monument points to ancient times when ships docked at the port were so many that their masts were described as a forest. Ningbo was also home to many shipbuilding businesses. The ocean-going ships were first built in the Tang Dynasty. The shipbuilding industry in Mingzhou (the ancient name of the present-day Ningbo) led the country in the Song Dynasty (960-1279). During the years of Emperor Zhenzong of the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), a government shipyard was set up at todays Sanjiangkou. Ships made there were for trade and for government diplomats on their overseas missions. History records that two diplomats of the Northern Song Dynasty rode ships built in Mingzhou to visit Korea in 1978. History does not specify the tonnage of these ships. Lin Shimin, a researcher with Ningbo Cultural Relics Institute, estimates that the dead weight capacity of each of the two ships was about 1,100 tons.

On the opposite side of the river across the monument is the Ningbo Museum of Folk Lifestyles. On the site of an ancient guild house, the museum explains the shipbuilding history in ancient Ningbo. Ocean-going ships made in ancient Mingzhou set sail for Korea on the north, Japan on the east, Guangzhou on the south. Ships from Guangzhou then took two different routes. One went southeastward and the other southwestward. The monument carries a map showing the specifics of the Tea Road on the Sea.

Tea

Mingzhou became the departure port of the Tea Road on the Sea for ample reasons. Experts have looked into the ancient history of Ningbo and agreed that Ningbo has been an important tea producer and that tea exported from Ningbo also came from tea producers and suppliers in the vast inlands in central China.

A big part of the Siming Mountain sits in Ningbo, where Yuyao River, Fenghua River and Caoer River originate. The mountain has excellent geographic conditions for growing tea. For over 300 consecutive years from the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) up to the Ming Dynasty, a county under the jurisdiction of Ningbo sent 130 kg of tribute tea each year to the royal houses whereas each of other counties in Ningbo could only contribute one to three kilograms each year. The Pearl Tea, a very famous brand in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), was largely produced in the Siming Mountain. Today, Dalan Town in Yuyao has a land of 1,700 hectares dedicated to tea production. Dalan is one of Chinas largest green tea producers at township level.

Rural areas around Ningbo were a major source of tea export from Ningbo to overseas markets. But there were more suppliers from neighboring provinces. A research shows that tea businesses in the last years of the Qing Dynasty in Ningbo were mostly operated by people from Anhui Province. This data points to a long tea-transport route which started in Tunxi, Anhui, went all the way down the Qiantang River, switched into the Eastern Zhejiang Canal at Xixing, Xiaoshan near Hangzhou before it reached Ningbo. Tea was also transported all the way from Jiangsu in the north, Jiangxi in the west and Hunan and Hubei in central China. Other places in Zhejiang also supplied tea to the port.

Despite the fact that Shanghai is a flourishing port city in modern times, Ningbo remains the second largest port for tea export today. Data indicates that Ningbo shipped out 40,000 tons of tea to overseas markets in 2008. A part of the amount came from tea producers which once shipped their tea to Mingzhou for export in ancient times.

Designation

In April 2006, an international forum was held to explore the topic of the Tea Road on the Sea. A proposal was made at the forum to mark Ningbo as the departure port. In April 2008, at the proposal of a Japanese scholar, the Research Center of Tea Culture in East Asia was founded by Ningbo Tea Promotion Association. The next step became natural: the monument site was unveiled in May, 2009.

According to research by experts, Ningbo owed its status as the departure port of the Tea Road on the Sea to Buddhist monks, government diplomats, and business people.

Buddhist monks from the Korean Peninsular and Japan came to China for advanced Buddhism studies. Tea was among the important things they brought back to their homelands. These monks include founding fathers of some influential Buddhist sects in Japan and Korea today. The ancient historical documents and stone steles in Ningbo and Japan relate whos who and whats what in tea-fragranced exchanges between China and Japan.

Korea and Japan sent their envoys to the Tang (618-907), Song and Ming dynasties. Mingzhou was an ideal first choice for their entry into China. It took five days and four nights to sail before the wind from Ningbo to Japan. In the Song Dynasty, a guesthouse for Korean diplomats was constructed in Ningbo. The residence is now preserved in Ningbo. Tea produced in Yuyao is mentioned in the history of Japan. Celadon made in Zhejiang is listed as national treasure in Korea. Underwater archaeological probes in ports in Southeast Asia have recovered celadon tea sets made in Yue Kilns in Zhejiang.

Traders brought tea overseas. In the old hard days, people from Ningbo traveled overseas for a living. Tea was a must in their baggage for survival on the sea and in foreign lands. Tea buyers from foreign countries frequented Ningbo. In 1893, a Russian businessman named Popov came to Ningbo after visiting many other tea production areas across China. The Russian tea trader believed tea made in Ningbo was the best. He bought tea in Ningbo and invited Liu Junzhou, the deputy director of Ningbo Tea Plant, and 12 tea technicians to operate a tea plantation in Georgia, Russia. Liu Junzhou dedicated 30 years of his life to tea farming in Georgia. He was honored by the Tsar and the Soviet Union respectively. Historians agree that tea in Georgia was introduced from Ningbo. One of the secondary monuments at the site relates the story of Liu Junzhou and his achievement in Georgia. □

主站蜘蛛池模板: 四虎影视无码永久免费观看| 亚洲码一区二区三区| 日韩 欧美 小说 综合网 另类| 无码专区国产精品第一页| 日本人妻一区二区三区不卡影院 | 大香伊人久久| 8090午夜无码专区| 在线欧美日韩| 国产精品黑色丝袜的老师| 亚洲不卡网| 男女男免费视频网站国产| 国产91特黄特色A级毛片| 在线a网站| 色欲色欲久久综合网| 99视频全部免费| 日本不卡视频在线| 久久公开视频| 国产成人精品视频一区视频二区| 日日拍夜夜操| 国内视频精品| 国产成人夜色91| 狠狠ⅴ日韩v欧美v天堂| 国产成人夜色91| 无码精油按摩潮喷在线播放| 亚洲欧美极品| 国产欧美一区二区三区视频在线观看| 亚洲aⅴ天堂| 九九久久99精品| 无码专区国产精品第一页| 国产网站黄| 成年人免费国产视频| 亚洲色偷偷偷鲁综合| 国产免费久久精品99re不卡| 国产精品黑色丝袜的老师| 欧美午夜在线播放| 色窝窝免费一区二区三区| 亚洲欧美另类久久久精品播放的| 日韩人妻少妇一区二区| 一区二区影院| 欧美在线三级| 久久人搡人人玩人妻精品| 成年午夜精品久久精品| 51国产偷自视频区视频手机观看| 欧美三级自拍| 97人人做人人爽香蕉精品| 精品一区二区三区无码视频无码| 一级毛片不卡片免费观看| 女人爽到高潮免费视频大全| 成人午夜精品一级毛片| 欧美日韩国产成人高清视频| 91香蕉视频下载网站| 91麻豆国产视频| 992tv国产人成在线观看| 激情亚洲天堂| 55夜色66夜色国产精品视频| 青草视频在线观看国产| 欧洲日本亚洲中文字幕| 久久精品日日躁夜夜躁欧美| 日韩成人免费网站| 日韩视频福利| 91精品情国产情侣高潮对白蜜| 成人欧美在线观看| 精品无码视频在线观看| 2020亚洲精品无码| 国产性精品| 精品欧美视频| 国产一区二区色淫影院| 日韩av在线直播| 99精品福利视频| 欧美黄色网站在线看| 日韩经典精品无码一区二区| 午夜天堂视频| 国产精品自在拍首页视频8| 91精品国产麻豆国产自产在线| 久久久久无码精品国产免费| 国产精品第| 国产高清国内精品福利| 国产精品免费p区| 91久久国产综合精品| 久久伊伊香蕉综合精品| 无码国内精品人妻少妇蜜桃视频| 亚洲美女一级毛片|