• `discovery' of the `New World' was accompanied by the
    discovery of tobacco by Portuguese sailors. This
    plant, treasured by the American `Indians' for
    its presumed medicinal and obvious stimulant
    properties, was eagerly embraced by the
    Portuguese who then moved it to the `Old World'
    of Europe.When the Portuguese eventually did land on
    India's shores, they brought in tobacco. They
    introduced it initially in the royal courts where
    it soon found favour. It became a valuable
    commodity of barter trade, being used by the
    Portuguese for purchasing Indian textiles. The
    taste for tobacco, first acquired by the Indian
    royals, soon spread to the commoners and, in
    the seventeenth century, tobacco began to take
    firm roots in India


    http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:KXXDrwY7eFIJ:www.whoindia.org/
    LinkFiles/Tobacco_Free_Initiative_03Chapter-
    02.0.pdf+tobacco+in+india+portuguese&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2&client=opera

    interestingly there is also a mention of a local breed of tobacco
    before that. i am checking up.

    venketesh
  • some historical trivia about tobacco


    The word nicotiana (as well as nicotine) was named in honor of Jean
    Nicot, French ambassador to Portugal, who in 1559 sent it as a
    medicine to the court of Catherine de Medici

    North American tribes would carry large amounts of tobacco in pouches
    as a readily accepted trade item and would often smoke it in pipes,
    It was believed that tobacco was a gift from the Creator and that the
    exhaled tobacco smoke was capable of carrying one's thoughts and
    prayers to heaven.

    (LOL- perhaps their souls too)

    Tobacco was used as currency by the Virginia settlers for years,

    The importation of tobacco into Europe was not without resistance and
    controversy in the 17th century. Stuart King James I wrote a famous
    polemic titled A Counterblaste to Tobacco in 1604, in which the king
    denounced tobacco use as "[a] custome lothsome to the eye, hatefull
    to the Nose, harmefull to the braine, dangerous to the Lungs, and in
    the blacke stinking fume thereof, neerest resembling the horrible
    Stigian smoke of the pit that is bottomelesse." In that same year, an
    English statute was enacted that placed a heavy protective tariff on
    every pound of tobacco brought into England[8].

    Tobacco as a commercial product first arrived in the Ottoman Empire
    in the late 16th century.[11] By 1700, it had reached Asia, and the
    Middle East












    > `discovery' of the `New World' was accompanied by the
    > discovery of tobacco by Portuguese sailors. This
    > plant, treasured by the American `Indians' for
    > its presumed medicinal and obvious stimulant
    > properties, was eagerly embraced by the
    > Portuguese who then moved it to the `Old World'
    > of Europe.When the Portuguese eventually did land on
    > India's shores, they brought in tobacco. They
    > introduced it initially in the royal courts where
    > it soon found favour. It became a valuable
    > commodity of barter trade, being used by the
    > Portuguese for purchasing Indian textiles. The
    > taste for tobacco, first acquired by the Indian
    > royals, soon spread to the commoners and, in
    > the seventeenth century, tobacco began to take
    > firm roots in India
    >
    >
    > http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:KXXDrwY7eFIJ:www.whoindia.org/
    > LinkFiles/Tobacco_Free_Initiative_03Chapter-
    > 02.0.pdf+tobacco+in+india+portuguese&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2&client=opera
    >
    > interestingly there is also a mention of a local breed of tobacco
    > before that. i am checking up.
    >
    > venketesh
    >
  • Hi Venkat, tobacco is still very sacred to native americans and is used as incense even in their rituals. It was to my astonishment to attend a sacred ritual with 'beedi' like incense only to be informed that it was a sacred plant to them!! What is sweet to the goose is sauce to the gander they say :))
     
    Malathi

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