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serfdom « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

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Posts Tagged ‘serfdom’

The forgotten Chinese serfs who picked tea for Victorian England

Thursday, December 18th, 2025

Christoph Hess

In 19th-century England, afternoon tea would not have been complete without a serving of Keemun one of the Victorians’ most prized black teas. This was not for a lack of choice. A secret operation headed by the Scottish botanist Robert Fortune, who donned Chinese-style garments to travel incognito to China’s tea regions, had seized the secrets of tea production and successfully established plantations in British India from the 1850s on. But many British consumers kept a taste for Chinese teas, especially the malty and slightly smoky Keemun, which, when scented with bergamot, made an excellent Earl Grey. What they may not have known was that their love for a cup of Keemun connected their warm salons to a group of Chinese serfs who picked the tea leaves from the steep mountain slopes of Qimen (old: Keemun) County in East China. 

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To the manor bound: Serfdom in Europe

Thursday, November 21st, 2024

Tracy Dennison

Serfdom is usually associated with the medieval period, and conjures images of an impoverished peasantry toiling under duress in the fields around the lord’s castle. This view is not so much incorrect as incomplete. In many parts of Europe, especially central and eastern Europe, there were still enserfed peasants in the 18th and 19th centuries. Serfdom disappeared from the European landscape gradually: first in England, in the decades after the Black Death, and last in Russia, by state decree in 1861.  

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