Why were the English and Japanese so healthy? The role of tea - Alan Macfarlane 1995

Duration: 58 mins 28 secs
Share this media item:
Embed this media item:


About this item
Image inherited from collection
Description: A lecture by Alan Macfarlane to the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, originally given in 1995 and filmed in January 2013. Alan Macfarlane suggests that the mystery of the low mortality rates in England and Japan, especially as great cities emerged and the industrial revolution proceeded in England, may lie in the widespread custom of tea drinking, which killed water borne bacteria. The thesis was developed in Alan Macfarlane 'The Savage Wars of Peace' ( 1997) and Alan and Iris Macfarlane, 'Green Gold: the Empire of Tea' (2003).
 
Created: 2013-02-05 14:14
Collection: Lectures and other materials
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Prof Alan Macfarlane
Language: eng (English)
Keywords: health; disease; industrial revolution; tea; bacteria;
Available Formats
Format Quality Bitrate Size
MPEG-4 Video 450x360    1.92 Mbits/sec 845.20 MB View Download
WebM 450x360    644.36 kbits/sec 276.01 MB View Download
iPod Video 480x360    507.06 kbits/sec 217.14 MB View Download
iPod Video 160x120    290.63 kbits/sec 124.45 MB View Download
MP3 44100 Hz 249.74 kbits/sec 107.07 MB Listen Download
MP3 44100 Hz 62.22 kbits/sec 26.77 MB Listen Download
Auto * (Allows browser to choose a format it supports)