Opium, taken orally to relieve tension and …

Years: 1624 - 1635

Opium, taken orally to relieve tension and pain, is used in limited quantities until the seventeenth century, when the Native American practice of smoking tobacco in pipes spreads from North America to China.

The Portuguese, eager for a commodity to barter for Chinese silks, import tobacco from their Brazilian colony halfway around the world.

The Chinese frustrate the Portuguese by growing their own tobacco, but the pipe itself, which had been introduced by the Spanish, turns out to be the key to China's markets.

Some smokers begin to mix Indian opium with tobacco in their pipes, and smoking gradually becomes the preferred method of taking opium, as the effects are instantaneous.

The Portuguese, while trading along the East China Sea, introduce opium smoking into China from Java in the seventeenth century; the practice spreads rapidly.

The Chinese authorities, viewing the practice barbaric and subversive, react by prohibiting the sale of opium, but these edicts are largely ignored.

Portuguese merchants carrying cargoes of Indian opium through Macao direct its trade flow into China.

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