May 17, 2012
Kamal Junt Tour Details

Kamal
Junt
Kamal Junt
 

Cigarettes Plus Tobacco Shop

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Phone
916-434-8637

 
   
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Cigarettes Plus Tobacco Shop
155 Joiner Parkway, Ste. 200, Lincoln, California 95648
Details:
Prelude


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Prehistory: Although small amounts of nicotine may be found in
some Old World plants, including belladonna and Nicotiana
africana, and nicotine metabolites have been found in human
remains and pipes in the Near East and Africa, there is no
indication of habitual tobacco use in the Ancient world, on any
continent save the Americas.
The sacred origin of tobacco and the first pipe (Schoolcraft)
c. 6000 BCE: Experts believe the tobacco plant, as we know it
today, begins growing in the Americas.
c.1 BCE: Experts believe American inhabitants have begun finding
ways to use tobacco, including smoking (in a number of
variations), chewing and in probably hallucinogenic enemas (by
the Peruvian Aguaruna aboriginals).
c. 1 CE: Tobacco was "nearly everywhere" in the Americas.
(American Heritage Book of Indians, p.41).
470-630 CE: Between 470 and 630 A.D. the Mayas began to scatter,
some moving as far as the Mississippi Valley. The Toltecs, who
created the mighty Aztec Empire, borrowed the smoking custom from
the Mayas who remained behind. Two castes of smokers emerged
among them. Those in the Court of Montezuma, who mingled tobacco
with the resin of other leaves and smoked pipes with great
ceremony after their evening meal; and the lesser Indians, who
rolled tobacco leaves together to form a crude cigar. The Mayas
who settled in the Mississippi Valley spread their custom to the
neighboring tribes. The latter adapted tobacco smoking to their
own religion, believing that their god, the almighty Manitou,
revealed himself in the rising smoke. And, as in Central America,
a complex system of religious and political rites was developed
around tobacco. (Imperial Tobacco Canada, Tobacco History)
600-1000 CE: UAXACTUN, GUATEMALA. First pictorial record of
smoking: A pottery vessel found here dates from before the 11th
century. On it a Maya is depicted smoking a roll of tobacco
leaves tied with a string. The Mayan term for smoking was sik'ar

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Introduction:
The Chiapas Gift, or The Indians' Revenge?

Columbus' sailors find Arawak and Taino Indians smoking tobacco.
Some take up the habit and begin to spread it worldwide.
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1492-10-12: Columbus Discovers Tobacco; "Certain Dried Leaves"
Are Received as Gifts, and Thrown Away.

On this bright morning Columbus and his men set foot on the New
World for the first time, landing on the beach of San Salvador
Island or Samana Cay in the Bahamas, or Gran Turk Island. The
indigenous Arawaks, possibly thinking the strange visitors
divine, offer gifts. Columbus wrote in his journal,

the natives brought fruit, wooden spears, and certain dried
leaves which gave off a distinct fragrance.
As each item seemed much-prized by the natives; Columbus accepted
the gifts and ordered them brought back to the ship. The fruit
was eaten; the pungent "dried leaves" were thrown away.


1492-10-15: Columbus Mentions Tobacco. "We found a man in a canoe
going from Santa Maria to Fernandia. He had with him some dried
leaves which are in high value among them, for a quantity of it
was brought to me at San Salvador" -- Christopher Columbus'
Journal

1492-11: Jerez and Torres Discover Smoking; Jerez Becomes First
European Smoker

Rodrigo de Jerez and Luis de Torres, in Cuba searching for the
Khan of Cathay (China), are credited with first observing
smoking. They reported that the natives wrapped dried tobacco
leaves in palm or maize "in the manner of a musket formed of
paper." After lighting one end, they commenced "drinking" the
smoke through the other. Jerez became a confirmed smoker, and is
thought to be the first outside of the Americas. He brought the
habit back to his hometown, but the smoke billowing from his
mouth and nose so frightened his neighbors he was imprisoned by
the holy inquisitors for 7 years. By the time he was released,
smoking was a Spanish craze.


1493: Ramon Pane, a monk who accompanied Columbus on his second
voyage, gave lengthy descriptions about the custom of taking
snuff. He also described how the Indians inhaled smoke through a
Y-shaped tube. Pane is usually credited with being the first man
to introduce tobacco to Europe.

1497: Robert Pane, who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his
second voyage in 1493, writes the first report of native tobacco
use to appear in Europe, "De Insularium Ribitus."
1498: Columbus visits Trinidad and Tobago, naming the latter
after the native tobacco pipe.
1499: Amerigo Vespucci noticed that the American Indians had a
curious habit of chewing green leaves mixed with a white powder.
They carried two gourds around their necks -- one filled with
leaves, the other with powder. First, they put leaves in their
mouths. Then, after dampening a small stick with saliva, they
dipped it in the powder and mixed the adhering powder with the
leaves in their mouths, making a kind of chewing tobacco.
(Imperial Tobacco Canada,
Last Tour Update: May 15, 2012
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