The introduction of "growing tobacco" is as follows:
Poetry writing background: Emperor Kangxi Michelle Ye did not smoke, nor did he like others to smoke. Li's "Light Ink Record", Volume 6, records a passage that Kangxi said during his southern tour and in Texas: I have never been good at wine. I can drink a catty, but I don't need it.
The most hateful thing is smoking. Did the ministers see me smoking in the paddock? Every time I see a minister eating secretly in the governor's house, I feel sick and exhausted. Not only do I not eat cigarettes, but I haven't eaten cigarettes since Taizong, Taizong and Shizu, so I hate people who eat cigarettes the most.
There is an old saying in China that "alcohol and tobacco cannot be separated", but compared with the long history of wine in China, tobacco has not appeared in China for a long time. It has been less than 500 years since tobacco was introduced from the Philippines (called land) during Jiajing period (considered as Wanli period in the past).
The earliest record of tobacco entering China was recorded by Lv Yao in Ming Dynasty. There is such a passage in the book: "There is a grass in Lu, which is said to be light and one is drunk." Burn one end with fire, put one end to your mouth, and smoke enters your throat from the pipe ... Someone brought Zhangzhou to plant it, and now it is more than Luzon, and it is sold in other countries. "
In the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, tobacco, like wine and tea, became an important consumer product in people's daily life. In the sixth year of Shunzhi in Qing Dynasty, when the scholar was guarding Ninggu Pagoda in Heilongjiang Province, he entertained visitors with locally grown tobacco, and said in the poem "Eating Tobacco" that "customs are like hemp and wheat, and green stems and red nuclei are planted in it; The way to smoke the sand bed is to leave the guests and friends on the kang as money. "
According to historical records, the ancients' hobby of tobacco was even more serious than today, which may be related to the ancients' excessive superstition of tobacco. The ancients regarded tobacco not only as a "refreshing" thing, but as a "specific medicine".
When tobacco entered China, it also introduced a story that was talked about by Chinese people: Princess Tamba of Luzon Island was abandoned in the wild after her death. Unexpectedly, she woke up after smelling the smell of tobacco. Since then, this tobacco translated as "Tamba" has a magical name "Die for Love".