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Black drink

Black drink is a name for several kinds of ritual beverages brewed by Native Americans in the Southeastern United States. Traditional ceremonial people of the Yuchi,[1] Caddo,[2] Chickasaw,[3] Cherokee, Choctaw, Muscogee and some other Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands used the black drink in purification ceremonies. It was occasionally known as white drink because of the association of the color white with peace leaders in some Native cultures in the Southeast.[4]

Chief Saturiwa prepares his men for battle, from Plate XI of Jacques le Moyne des Morgues's engraving of Fort Caroline, Jacques le Moyne and Theodor De Bry.

The preparation and protocols vary between tribes and ceremonial grounds; a prominent ingredient is the roasted leaves and stems of Ilex vomitoria (commonly known as yaupon holly), a plant native to the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. Black drink also usually contains emetic herbs.[5]

Preparation edit

 
Preparing Black Drink, engraving by Joseph-François Lafitau, 1723
 
Yaupon holly

According to the ethnohistorical record, the yaupon leaves and branches used for the black drink were traditionally picked as close to the time of its planned consumption as possible. After picking, historically they were lightly parched in a ceramic container over fire. The roasting increases the solubility in water of the caffeine, which is the same reason coffee beans are roasted.[6] After browning, they were boiled in large containers of water until the liquid reached a dark brown or black color, giving it its name. The liquid was then strained into containers to cool, until it was cool enough to not scald the skin, and drunk while still hot. Because caffeine is 30 times more soluble in boiling water than room temperature water, this heightened its effect. It was then consumed in a ritual manner. Its physiological effects are believed to be mainly those of massive doses of caffeine. Three to six cups of strong coffee is equal to 0.5 to 1.0 grams of caffeine; the black drink could have delivered at least this much and possibly up to 3.0 to 6.0 grams of caffeine.[7] Owen gives the caffeine content of coffee as between 1.01 and 1.42 percent [8] In comparison, Ilex vomitoria leaves contain 0.0038 to 0.2288 percent caffeine by weight according to experiments performed by Adam Edwards in 2002.[9] Similar methods of production were adopted by European colonists for the production of a drink that often shared the same names with Native names for the black drink but was used for different, secular purposes.

The general method of production is known, but not all details of the preparation and ceremonial usage of the black drink are. The source of the emetic effect of black drink is not known and has been speculated upon by historians, archaeologists, and botanists. Some professionals believe it to be caused by the addition of the poisonous eryngium yuccifolium.[10]

Contemporary preparation and usage of the black drink by Native Americans is less well documented. Online recipes for the black drink have been criticized by some Native Americans as potentially dangerous and potentially poisonous due to those recipes leaving out key steps. The berries of the yaupon holly are poisonous.[11] Kidney failure is one possible outcome of consuming beverages containing holly leaves. Adam Edwards and Bradley Bennett tested stems, roots, and leaves of the yaupon. They found that the only possible toxic substance was theobromine, an alkaloid, but the amounts of the chemical were so low that a single gram of cocoa contained over 2,255 times more theobromine than yaupon.[12]

Archaeological accounts edit

 
Map of the geographical extent of black drink use by Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands, prior to 19th century Indian Removal

Archaeologists have demonstrated the use of various kinds of black drink among Native American groups stretching back far into antiquity, possibly dating to Late Archaic times. During the Hopewell period, the shell cups known from later black drink rituals become common in high-status burials along with mortuary pottery and engraved stone and copper tablets. The significance of the shell cups may indicate the beginning of black drink ceremonialism. The fact that both the shells and the yaupon holly come from the same geographical location may indicate they were traded together in the Hopewell Interaction Sphere.[13] The appearance of shell cups can be used as a virtual marker for the advent of Hopewell culture in many instances.[14] During the Mississippian culture period, the presence of items associated with the black drink ceremony had spread over most of the south, with many hundreds of examples from Etowah, Spiro, Moundville and Hiwassee Island.

Black drink at Cahokia edit

 
Ceramic beaker from Cahokia with woodhenge motif

Archaeologists working at Cahokia, the largest Mississippian culture settlement located near the modern city of St. Louis, found distinctive and relatively rare pottery beakers dating from 1050 to 1250 CE. The beakers are small round pots with a handle on one side and a tiny lip on the opposing side. The surfaces of the unfired vessels was incised with motifs representing water and the underworld and resemble the whelk shells known to have been used for the consumption of the beverage during historic times. The inside of the vessels were found to be coated with a plant residue, which when tested was found to contain theobromine, caffeine and ursolic acid in the right proportions to have come from the Ilex vomitoria.[15] The presence of the black drink in the Greater Cahokia area at this early date pushes back the definitive use of the black drink by several centuries. The presence of the black drink hundreds of miles outside of its natural range on the East and Gulf coasts is evidence of a substantial trade network with the southeast, a trade that also involved sharks teeth and whelk shells.[16][17][18]

Shell cups edit

 
Engraved conch shell cup from Spiro Mounds

In historic accounts from the 16th and 17th century, the black drink is usually imbibed in rituals using a cup made of marine shell. Three main species of marine shells have been identified as being used as cups for the black drink, lightning whelk, emperor helmet, and the horse conch. The most common was the lightning whelk, which has a left-handed or sinistral spiral. The left-handed spiral may have held religious significance because of its association with dance and ritual. The center columnella, which runs longitudinally down the shell, would be removed, and the rough edges sanded down to make a dipper-like cup. The columnella would then be used as a pendant, a motif that shows up frequently in Southeastern Ceremonial Complex designs. In the archaeological record columnella pendants are usually found in conjunction with bi-lobed arrows, stone maces, earspools, and necklace beads (all of which are motifs identified with the falcon dancer/warrior/chunkey player mythological figure).[19] Artifacts made from these marine shells have been found as far north as Wisconsin and as far west as Oklahoma. Several examples of cups from Moundville and Spiro have been found to have rings of black residue in the bottoms, suggesting they were used for black drink rituals. Many examples of shell cups found in Mississippian culture mounds are engraved with S.E.C.C. imagery. A few examples portray what is theorized to be black drink rituals, including what some anthropologists have interpreted as vomit issuing from the mouths of mythological beings.[13]

US Southwest and Mexican Northwest edit

Pottery samples recovered from sites in modern Southwestern United States and Northwestern Mexico have tested positive for the ratio of methylxanthines associated with those produced by Ilex vomitoria. The same study also identified methylxanthines ratios associated with Theobroma cacao. Neither plants are native to the areas from which the pottery samples were recovered, which suggests trading between areas where those plants are native. The chemical analysis also suggests a possible increase in drinks prepared from cacao after the year 1200, and a decrease in the use of drinks prepared from Ilex vomitoria. Freshwater shells from Texas and Arkansas have been recovered from Pueblo Bonito, which have been used as possible evidence for the trade of Ilex vomitoria from the east. There are also some stands of Ilex vomitoria in Mesoamerica, so the exact origins of the Ilex vomitoria used to prepare the drinks is currently unknown.[20]

Historical accounts edit

Several tribes across the Southeastern United States use a form of the black drink in their ceremonies. Muscogee Creeks, Cherokees, Choctaws, Ais, Guale, Chickasaws, Chitimacha, Timucua, and others are documented users of a type of black drink. Although rituals vary amongst the different tribes, there are some common traits among them. Black drink is most commonly drunk by men, who also prepare it, but there are some accounts of its preparation and use by women among some groups. Removal of tribes to areas outside the natural range of Ilex vomitoria has been partially responsible for a decline in the preparation of the black drink among present Native Americans.

Ais edit

In 1696, Jonathan Dickinson witnessed the use of a beverage brewed from the Yaupon Holly among the Ais of Florida. Dickinson later learned that the Spanish called the plant casseena. The Ais parched the leaves in a pot, and then boiled them. The resulting liquid was then transferred to a large bowl using a gourd that had a long neck with a small hole at the top, and a 2-inch-wide (51 mm) hole in the side. On the occasion Dickinson witnessed, he estimated that there were nearly three gallons of the beverage in the bowl. After the liquid had cooled, the chief was presented with a conch-shell of the beverage. The chief threw part of it on the ground as a blessing and drank the rest. The chief's associates were then served in turn. Lower status men, women, and children were not allowed to touch or taste the beverage. The chief and his associates sat drinking this brew, smoking and talking for most of the day. In the evening, the bowl that had held the beverage was covered with a skin to make a drum. The Ais, accompanied by the drum and some rattles, sang and danced until the middle of the night.[21]

Cherokee edit

Cherokee black drink is taken for purification at several traditional ceremonies. Made with emetics, the complete recipe is not shared with the public. The black drink induces vomiting for purification purposes. Other ritual medicinal beverages are also used in the ceremonies. Ilex vomitoria was not native to the traditional area controlled by the Cherokee before removal, but it was brought in to the area through trade and then transplanted.

Muscogean peoples edit

Among the Muscogee the black drink is called ássi. In the ceremonies of some cultures that use the drink, after its preparation it is passed out to the highest-status person first, then the next highest status, and so forth. During each person's turn to drink, ritual songs may be sung. Its use was traditionally limited to only adult men.[22] The ritual name Asi Yahola or Black Drink Singer is corrupted into English as Osceola).[23]

Timucua edit

 
16th-century engraving by Jacques le Moyne of a Timucua ceremony involving the black drink

Among the Timucua, a type of black drink was called cacina by the Spanish and spelled casino in Pareja's Timucua writings. The preparation and consumption of the drink were strictly limited to the community council house. Women (other than an occasional female chief) were normally excluded from the council house except for activities such as dances, but did prepare the cacina. In 1678 a bedridden cacica (a female chief) was given permission to brew and consume cacina in her house, on the condition that no one else could be present while she did so.[24] The first sip of the black drink was called in Timucua casinomucu "eye of cacina".[25]

Cassina or yaupon tea edit

After European contact with tribes in what is today the Southeastern United States, colonists began using the charred leaves of the yaupon holly to make a tea similar to the black drink, but without the ritual vomiting of it. Its use by colonists in Spanish Florida is documented as far back as 1615. An account from that year describes Spaniards as experiencing symptoms that would now be described as caffeine dependence due to daily consumption of what they called cacina or té del indio. The use of Ilex vomitoria by colonists for tea making and for medicinal uses in the Carolinas is documented by the early eighteenth century. In the English-speaking colonies, it was known variously as cassina, yaupon tea, Indian tea, Carolina tea, and Appalachian tea. It was commonly believed to be and used as a diuretic. By the late 1700s, yaupon tea was described as being more commonly used in North Carolina at breakfast than tea made with Camellia sinensis. In addition to using it on their own, European colonists often consumed black drinks when engaging in discussions and treaties with Natives. Its preparation by European colonists was nearly identical to the method of preparation used by their Native neighbors. Its consumption by colonists in French Louisiana is speculated to have occurred, but lacks documentation other than one source describing its medicinal uses from 1716.[26]

During the Civil War, yaupon tea was used as a substitute for coffee and tea throughout the South. Yaupon continued to be used in North Carolina for medicinal purposes and as a common drink until the late 1890s. At that point, its use was stigmatized because of its natural abundance as being a habit associated with rural poor people. By 1928 it was described as only being in common use on Knotts Island, North Carolina. During the Interwar period the United States Department of Agriculture investigated the use of cassina tea as a substitute for coffee and tea. There were also a few attempts at the commercialization of cassina tea during that same period. By 1973 it was believed that cassina tea was only being served at the Pony Island Restaurant on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina.[26] In the early 2000s, yaupon tea began witnessing a resurgence in its popularity and can now be purchased online and at several historical sites related to Native Americans.[27][28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hudson, Charles M (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. p. 59.
  2. ^ Hudson, Charles, M (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 70–71.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Hudson, Charles, M (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 61–62.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Hudson, Charles M (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 2, 131.
  5. ^ Hudson, Charles, M (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Susan Budavari, ed. (1996). The Merck Index (12th ed.). Whitehouse Station, NJ: Merck & Co., Inc. p. 1674.
  7. ^ Hudson, Charles M. (1976). The Southeastern Indians. p. 226.
  8. ^ Owen, Daiel, 2006. Coffee and Cafeine FAQ: How much caffeine there is in X coffee? Access at http://coffeefaq.com/site/node/23
  9. ^ Edwards, Adam, 2002. morton/pdfs/a_edwards.pdf "Variation of caffeine and related alkaloids in Ilex vomitoria Ait. (Yaupon holly): A model of intraspecific alkaloid variation."[permanent dead link] Society for Economic Botany Julia F. Morton Award.
  10. ^ Hudson, Charles M. (1976). The Southeastern Indians. pp. 4, 59, 62, 138, 140–141.
  11. ^ Perry, Mac (1990). Landscaping in Florida. Pineapple Press. p. 253. ISBN 978-1561640577. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  12. ^ Edwards, Adam L.; Bennett, Bradley C. (2005). "Diversity of Methylxanthine Content in Ilex cassine L. and Ilex vomitoria Ait.: Assessing Sources of the North American Stimulant Cassina". Economic Botany. 59 (3): 275–285. doi:10.1663/0013-0001(2005)059[0275:domcii]2.0.co;2. S2CID 40377478.
  13. ^ a b Hudson, Charles M. (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 83–112.
  14. ^ Griffin, James B. (1952). Culture Periods in Eastern United States Archaeology. University of Chicago Press. p. 360.
  15. ^ Crown, Patricia L.; Emerson, Thomas E.; Gu, Jiyan; Hurst, W. Jeffery; Pauketat, Timothy R.; Ward, Timothy (28 August 2012). "Ritual Black Drink consumption at Cahokia". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109 (35): 13944–13949. doi:10.1073/pnas.1208404109. PMC 3435207. PMID 22869743.
  16. ^ Diana Yates (2012-08-06). "Researchers find evidence of ritual use of 'black drink' at Cahokia". University of Illinois.
  17. ^ Thomas H. Maugh II (2012-08-06). "Cahokia people had caffeine drink made from holly 900 years ago". Los Angeles Times.
  18. ^ Charles Choi (2012-08-06). "Caffeinated 'Vomit Drink' Nauseated North America's First City". LiveScience.
  19. ^ F. Kent Reilly; James Garber, eds. (2004). Ancient Objects and Sacred Realms. University of Texas Press. pp. 86–96. ISBN 978-0-292-71347-5.
  20. ^ Crown, Patricia (2015). "Ritual drinks in the pre-Hispanic US Southwest and Mexican Northwest". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. HighWire Press. 112 (37): 11436–11442. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11211436C. doi:10.1073/pnas.1511799112. PMC 4577151. PMID 26372965.
  21. ^ Hudson, Charles M. (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 45–46.
  22. ^ Hudson, Charles M. (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 126–137.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on October 1, 2008. Retrieved September 17, 2008.
  24. ^ Hann, John H. (1996). A History of the Timucua Indians and Missions. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. pp. 2, 26, 90–91, 328. ISBN 978-0-8130-1424-1.
  25. ^ Pareja, Francisco de (1886). Arte de la lengua Timuquana (in Spanish). Maisonneuve frères et C. Leclerc. p. 27.
  26. ^ a b Hudson, Charles M. (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. pp. 6–7, 150–155.
  27. ^ Murray Carpenter (4 August 2015). "Here's The Buzz On America's Forgotten Native 'Tea' Plant". The Salt. National Public Radio. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  28. ^ Stirn, Matt (24 February 2021). "Yaupon: The rebirth of America's forgotten tea". BBC Travel. Retrieved 24 October 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Hudson, Charles M. (1979). Black Drink: A Native American Tea. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-0462-X
  • Hale, Edwin Moses (1891). Ilex Cassine: The aboriginal North American tea : its history, distribution, and use among the native American Indians. Bulletin U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Division of Botany.
  • Andrews, Charles Mclean and Andrews, Evangeline Walker (1945). Jonathan Dickinson's Journal or, God's Protecting Providence. Being the Narrative of a Journey from Port Royal in Jamaica to Philadelphia between August 23, 1696 to April 1, 1697. Yale University Press. Reprinted 1981. Florida Classics Library.

External links edit

  • Crown, Patricia L.; Emerson, Thomas E.; Gu, Jiyan; Hurst, W. Jeffery; Pauketat, Timothy R.; Ward, Timothy (28 August 2012). "Ritual Black Drink consumption at Cahokia". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 109 (35): 13944–13949. doi:10.1073/pnas.1208404109. PMC 3435207. PMID 22869743.
  • Elizabeth Norton (2012-08-08). "'Black Drink' Tea Cup Discovered, Linked To Native American Ritual And Trade Network". Huffington Post.
  • Photo of Cahokia mugs associated with black drink : John Shanks (2012-08-07). "Use of Caffeinated Drink in pre-Columbian North America". Sci-News.com.

black, drink, name, several, kinds, ritual, beverages, brewed, native, americans, southeastern, united, states, traditional, ceremonial, people, yuchi, caddo, chickasaw, cherokee, choctaw, muscogee, some, other, indigenous, peoples, southeastern, woodlands, us. Black drink is a name for several kinds of ritual beverages brewed by Native Americans in the Southeastern United States Traditional ceremonial people of the Yuchi 1 Caddo 2 Chickasaw 3 Cherokee Choctaw Muscogee and some other Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands used the black drink in purification ceremonies It was occasionally known as white drink because of the association of the color white with peace leaders in some Native cultures in the Southeast 4 Chief Saturiwa prepares his men for battle from Plate XI of Jacques le Moyne des Morgues s engraving of Fort Caroline Jacques le Moyne and Theodor De Bry The preparation and protocols vary between tribes and ceremonial grounds a prominent ingredient is the roasted leaves and stems of Ilex vomitoria commonly known as yaupon holly a plant native to the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts Black drink also usually contains emetic herbs 5 Contents 1 Preparation 2 Archaeological accounts 2 1 Black drink at Cahokia 2 2 Shell cups 2 3 US Southwest and Mexican Northwest 3 Historical accounts 3 1 Ais 3 2 Cherokee 3 3 Muscogean peoples 3 4 Timucua 4 Cassina or yaupon tea 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksPreparation edit nbsp Preparing Black Drink engraving by Joseph Francois Lafitau 1723 nbsp Yaupon hollyAccording to the ethnohistorical record the yaupon leaves and branches used for the black drink were traditionally picked as close to the time of its planned consumption as possible After picking historically they were lightly parched in a ceramic container over fire The roasting increases the solubility in water of the caffeine which is the same reason coffee beans are roasted 6 After browning they were boiled in large containers of water until the liquid reached a dark brown or black color giving it its name The liquid was then strained into containers to cool until it was cool enough to not scald the skin and drunk while still hot Because caffeine is 30 times more soluble in boiling water than room temperature water this heightened its effect It was then consumed in a ritual manner Its physiological effects are believed to be mainly those of massive doses of caffeine Three to six cups of strong coffee is equal to 0 5 to 1 0 grams of caffeine the black drink could have delivered at least this much and possibly up to 3 0 to 6 0 grams of caffeine 7 Owen gives the caffeine content of coffee as between 1 01 and 1 42 percent 8 In comparison Ilex vomitoria leaves contain 0 0038 to 0 2288 percent caffeine by weight according to experiments performed by Adam Edwards in 2002 9 Similar methods of production were adopted by European colonists for the production of a drink that often shared the same names with Native names for the black drink but was used for different secular purposes The general method of production is known but not all details of the preparation and ceremonial usage of the black drink are The source of the emetic effect of black drink is not known and has been speculated upon by historians archaeologists and botanists Some professionals believe it to be caused by the addition of the poisonous eryngium yuccifolium 10 Contemporary preparation and usage of the black drink by Native Americans is less well documented Online recipes for the black drink have been criticized by some Native Americans as potentially dangerous and potentially poisonous due to those recipes leaving out key steps The berries of the yaupon holly are poisonous 11 Kidney failure is one possible outcome of consuming beverages containing holly leaves Adam Edwards and Bradley Bennett tested stems roots and leaves of the yaupon They found that the only possible toxic substance was theobromine an alkaloid but the amounts of the chemical were so low that a single gram of cocoa contained over 2 255 times more theobromine than yaupon 12 Archaeological accounts edit nbsp Map of the geographical extent of black drink use by Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands prior to 19th century Indian RemovalArchaeologists have demonstrated the use of various kinds of black drink among Native American groups stretching back far into antiquity possibly dating to Late Archaic times During the Hopewell period the shell cups known from later black drink rituals become common in high status burials along with mortuary pottery and engraved stone and copper tablets The significance of the shell cups may indicate the beginning of black drink ceremonialism The fact that both the shells and the yaupon holly come from the same geographical location may indicate they were traded together in the Hopewell Interaction Sphere 13 The appearance of shell cups can be used as a virtual marker for the advent of Hopewell culture in many instances 14 During the Mississippian culture period the presence of items associated with the black drink ceremony had spread over most of the south with many hundreds of examples from Etowah Spiro Moundville and Hiwassee Island Black drink at Cahokia edit nbsp Ceramic beaker from Cahokia with woodhenge motifArchaeologists working at Cahokia the largest Mississippian culture settlement located near the modern city of St Louis found distinctive and relatively rare pottery beakers dating from 1050 to 1250 CE The beakers are small round pots with a handle on one side and a tiny lip on the opposing side The surfaces of the unfired vessels was incised with motifs representing water and the underworld and resemble the whelk shells known to have been used for the consumption of the beverage during historic times The inside of the vessels were found to be coated with a plant residue which when tested was found to contain theobromine caffeine and ursolic acid in the right proportions to have come from the Ilex vomitoria 15 The presence of the black drink in the Greater Cahokia area at this early date pushes back the definitive use of the black drink by several centuries The presence of the black drink hundreds of miles outside of its natural range on the East and Gulf coasts is evidence of a substantial trade network with the southeast a trade that also involved sharks teeth and whelk shells 16 17 18 Shell cups edit nbsp Engraved conch shell cup from Spiro MoundsIn historic accounts from the 16th and 17th century the black drink is usually imbibed in rituals using a cup made of marine shell Three main species of marine shells have been identified as being used as cups for the black drink lightning whelk emperor helmet and the horse conch The most common was the lightning whelk which has a left handed or sinistral spiral The left handed spiral may have held religious significance because of its association with dance and ritual The center columnella which runs longitudinally down the shell would be removed and the rough edges sanded down to make a dipper like cup The columnella would then be used as a pendant a motif that shows up frequently in Southeastern Ceremonial Complex designs In the archaeological record columnella pendants are usually found in conjunction with bi lobed arrows stone maces earspools and necklace beads all of which are motifs identified with the falcon dancer warrior chunkey player mythological figure 19 Artifacts made from these marine shells have been found as far north as Wisconsin and as far west as Oklahoma Several examples of cups from Moundville and Spiro have been found to have rings of black residue in the bottoms suggesting they were used for black drink rituals Many examples of shell cups found in Mississippian culture mounds are engraved with S E C C imagery A few examples portray what is theorized to be black drink rituals including what some anthropologists have interpreted as vomit issuing from the mouths of mythological beings 13 US Southwest and Mexican Northwest edit Pottery samples recovered from sites in modern Southwestern United States and Northwestern Mexico have tested positive for the ratio of methylxanthines associated with those produced by Ilex vomitoria The same study also identified methylxanthines ratios associated with Theobroma cacao Neither plants are native to the areas from which the pottery samples were recovered which suggests trading between areas where those plants are native The chemical analysis also suggests a possible increase in drinks prepared from cacao after the year 1200 and a decrease in the use of drinks prepared from Ilex vomitoria Freshwater shells from Texas and Arkansas have been recovered from Pueblo Bonito which have been used as possible evidence for the trade of Ilex vomitoria from the east There are also some stands of Ilex vomitoria in Mesoamerica so the exact origins of the Ilex vomitoria used to prepare the drinks is currently unknown 20 Historical accounts editSeveral tribes across the Southeastern United States use a form of the black drink in their ceremonies Muscogee Creeks Cherokees Choctaws Ais Guale Chickasaws Chitimacha Timucua and others are documented users of a type of black drink Although rituals vary amongst the different tribes there are some common traits among them Black drink is most commonly drunk by men who also prepare it but there are some accounts of its preparation and use by women among some groups Removal of tribes to areas outside the natural range of Ilex vomitoria has been partially responsible for a decline in the preparation of the black drink among present Native Americans Ais edit In 1696 Jonathan Dickinson witnessed the use of a beverage brewed from the Yaupon Holly among the Ais of Florida Dickinson later learned that the Spanish called the plant casseena The Ais parched the leaves in a pot and then boiled them The resulting liquid was then transferred to a large bowl using a gourd that had a long neck with a small hole at the top and a 2 inch wide 51 mm hole in the side On the occasion Dickinson witnessed he estimated that there were nearly three gallons of the beverage in the bowl After the liquid had cooled the chief was presented with a conch shell of the beverage The chief threw part of it on the ground as a blessing and drank the rest The chief s associates were then served in turn Lower status men women and children were not allowed to touch or taste the beverage The chief and his associates sat drinking this brew smoking and talking for most of the day In the evening the bowl that had held the beverage was covered with a skin to make a drum The Ais accompanied by the drum and some rattles sang and danced until the middle of the night 21 Cherokee edit Cherokee black drink is taken for purification at several traditional ceremonies Made with emetics the complete recipe is not shared with the public The black drink induces vomiting for purification purposes Other ritual medicinal beverages are also used in the ceremonies Ilex vomitoria was not native to the traditional area controlled by the Cherokee before removal but it was brought in to the area through trade and then transplanted Muscogean peoples edit Among the Muscogee the black drink is called assi In the ceremonies of some cultures that use the drink after its preparation it is passed out to the highest status person first then the next highest status and so forth During each person s turn to drink ritual songs may be sung Its use was traditionally limited to only adult men 22 The ritual name Asi Yahola or Black Drink Singer is corrupted into English as Osceola 23 Timucua edit nbsp 16th century engraving by Jacques le Moyne of a Timucua ceremony involving the black drinkAmong the Timucua a type of black drink was called cacina by the Spanish and spelled casino in Pareja s Timucua writings The preparation and consumption of the drink were strictly limited to the community council house Women other than an occasional female chief were normally excluded from the council house except for activities such as dances but did prepare the cacina In 1678 a bedridden cacica a female chief was given permission to brew and consume cacina in her house on the condition that no one else could be present while she did so 24 The first sip of the black drink was called in Timucua casinomucu eye of cacina 25 Cassina or yaupon tea editAfter European contact with tribes in what is today the Southeastern United States colonists began using the charred leaves of the yaupon holly to make a tea similar to the black drink but without the ritual vomiting of it Its use by colonists in Spanish Florida is documented as far back as 1615 An account from that year describes Spaniards as experiencing symptoms that would now be described as caffeine dependence due to daily consumption of what they called cacina or te del indio The use of Ilex vomitoria by colonists for tea making and for medicinal uses in the Carolinas is documented by the early eighteenth century In the English speaking colonies it was known variously as cassina yaupon tea Indian tea Carolina tea and Appalachian tea It was commonly believed to be and used as a diuretic By the late 1700s yaupon tea was described as being more commonly used in North Carolina at breakfast than tea made with Camellia sinensis In addition to using it on their own European colonists often consumed black drinks when engaging in discussions and treaties with Natives Its preparation by European colonists was nearly identical to the method of preparation used by their Native neighbors Its consumption by colonists in French Louisiana is speculated to have occurred but lacks documentation other than one source describing its medicinal uses from 1716 26 During the Civil War yaupon tea was used as a substitute for coffee and tea throughout the South Yaupon continued to be used in North Carolina for medicinal purposes and as a common drink until the late 1890s At that point its use was stigmatized because of its natural abundance as being a habit associated with rural poor people By 1928 it was described as only being in common use on Knotts Island North Carolina During the Interwar period the United States Department of Agriculture investigated the use of cassina tea as a substitute for coffee and tea There were also a few attempts at the commercialization of cassina tea during that same period By 1973 it was believed that cassina tea was only being served at the Pony Island Restaurant on Ocracoke Island North Carolina 26 In the early 2000s yaupon tea began witnessing a resurgence in its popularity and can now be purchased online and at several historical sites related to Native Americans 27 28 See also editIlex cassine Dahoon holly or cassena sometimes used in black drink Mate beverage a South American drink made from dried leaves of yerba mate a species of holly Mississippian culture Native American cuisine Southeastern Ceremonial ComplexReferences edit Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press p 59 Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 70 71 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 61 62 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 2 131 Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Susan Budavari ed 1996 The Merck Index 12th ed Whitehouse Station NJ Merck amp Co Inc p 1674 Hudson Charles M 1976 The Southeastern Indians p 226 Owen Daiel 2006 Coffee and Cafeine FAQ How much caffeine there is in X coffee Access at http coffeefaq com site node 23 Edwards Adam 2002 morton pdfs a edwards pdf Variation of caffeine and related alkaloids in Ilex vomitoria Ait Yaupon holly A model of intraspecific alkaloid variation permanent dead link Society for Economic Botany Julia F Morton Award Hudson Charles M 1976 The Southeastern Indians pp 4 59 62 138 140 141 Perry Mac 1990 Landscaping in Florida Pineapple Press p 253 ISBN 978 1561640577 Retrieved 16 March 2017 Edwards Adam L Bennett Bradley C 2005 Diversity of Methylxanthine Content in Ilex cassine L and Ilex vomitoria Ait Assessing Sources of the North American Stimulant Cassina Economic Botany 59 3 275 285 doi 10 1663 0013 0001 2005 059 0275 domcii 2 0 co 2 S2CID 40377478 a b Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 83 112 Griffin James B 1952 Culture Periods in Eastern United States Archaeology University of Chicago Press p 360 Crown Patricia L Emerson Thomas E Gu Jiyan Hurst W Jeffery Pauketat Timothy R Ward Timothy 28 August 2012 Ritual Black Drink consumption at Cahokia Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 35 13944 13949 doi 10 1073 pnas 1208404109 PMC 3435207 PMID 22869743 Diana Yates 2012 08 06 Researchers find evidence of ritual use of black drink at Cahokia University of Illinois Thomas H Maugh II 2012 08 06 Cahokia people had caffeine drink made from holly 900 years ago Los Angeles Times Charles Choi 2012 08 06 Caffeinated Vomit Drink Nauseated North America s First City LiveScience F Kent Reilly James Garber eds 2004 Ancient Objects and Sacred Realms University of Texas Press pp 86 96 ISBN 978 0 292 71347 5 Crown Patricia 2015 Ritual drinks in the pre Hispanic US Southwest and Mexican Northwest Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America HighWire Press 112 37 11436 11442 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11211436C doi 10 1073 pnas 1511799112 PMC 4577151 PMID 26372965 Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 45 46 Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 126 137 Native Americans Archived from the original on October 1 2008 Retrieved September 17 2008 Hann John H 1996 A History of the Timucua Indians and Missions Gainesville Florida University Press of Florida pp 2 26 90 91 328 ISBN 978 0 8130 1424 1 Pareja Francisco de 1886 Arte de la lengua Timuquana in Spanish Maisonneuve freres et C Leclerc p 27 a b Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press pp 6 7 150 155 Murray Carpenter 4 August 2015 Here s The Buzz On America s Forgotten Native Tea Plant The Salt National Public Radio Retrieved 31 May 2018 Stirn Matt 24 February 2021 Yaupon The rebirth of America s forgotten tea BBC Travel Retrieved 24 October 2023 Bibliography edit Hudson Charles M 1979 Black Drink A Native American Tea University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 0462 X Hale Edwin Moses 1891 Ilex Cassine The aboriginal North American tea its history distribution and use among the native American Indians Bulletin U S Dept of Agriculture Division of Botany Andrews Charles Mclean and Andrews Evangeline Walker 1945 Jonathan Dickinson s Journal or God s Protecting Providence Being the Narrative of a Journey from Port Royal in Jamaica to Philadelphia between August 23 1696 to April 1 1697 Yale University Press Reprinted 1981 Florida Classics Library External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Black drink Crown Patricia L Emerson Thomas E Gu Jiyan Hurst W Jeffery Pauketat Timothy R Ward Timothy 28 August 2012 Ritual Black Drink consumption at Cahokia Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 35 13944 13949 doi 10 1073 pnas 1208404109 PMC 3435207 PMID 22869743 Elizabeth Norton 2012 08 08 Black Drink Tea Cup Discovered Linked To Native American Ritual And Trade Network Huffington Post Photo of Cahokia mugs associated with black drink John Shanks 2012 08 07 Use of Caffeinated Drink in pre Columbian North America Sci News com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black drink amp oldid 1181734451, wikipedia, wiki, 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