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For all the tea in China : how England stole the world's favorite drink and chan
Rose, Sarah
Adult Nonfiction 382.41372 R 2010
Rose, Sarah
Adult Nonfiction 382.41372 R 2010
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| Contents | Page |
|---|---|
| Prologue | p. 1 |
| 1 - Min River, China, 1845 | p. 6 |
| 2 - East India House, City of London, January 12, 1848 | p. 22 |
| 3 - Chelsea Physic Garden, May 7, 1848 | p. 35 |
| 4 - Shanghai to Hangzhou, September 1848 | p. 54 |
| 5 - Zhejiang Province near Hangzhou, October 1848 | p. 67 |
| 6 - A Green Tea Factory, Yangtze River, October 1848 | p. 83 |
| 7 - House of Wang, Anhui Province, November 1848 | p. 93 |
| 8 - Shanghai at the Lunar New Year, January 1849 | p. 107 |
| 9 - Calcutta Botanic Garden, March 1849 | p. 115 |
| 10 - Saharanpur, North-West Provinces, June 1849 | p. 125 |
| 11 - Ningbo to Bohea, the Great Tea Road, May and June 1849 | p. 136 |
| 12 - Bohea, July 1849 | p. 152 |
| 13 - Pucheng, September 1849 | p. 171 |
| 14 - Shanghai, Autumn 1849 | p. 182 |
| 15 - Shanghai, February 1851 | p. 190 |
| 16 - Himalayan Mountains, May 1851 | p. 206 |
| 17 - Royal Small Arms Factory, Enfield Lock, 1852 | p. 217 |
| 18 - Tea for the Victorians | p. 227 |
| 19 - FortuneÆs Story | p. 238 |
| Acknowledgments | p. 247 |
| Notes | p. 251 |
| Index | p. 255 |
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