Along with the heads of Louis XVI and his queen Marie Antoinette, another casualty of the French Revolution was tea. 
   Yes, really. It's a little known fact, but after its introduction to  Europe in the 17th century tea was tremendously popular in France. It  first arrived in Paris in 1636 (22 years before it appeared in England!)  and quickly became popular among the aristocracy. Cardinal Mazarin, the  most powerful man in France under Louis XIV (great-great-great  grandfather of the unfortunate Louis XVI), took tea regularly. Actually,  he started drinking it because he thought it would help his gout, but  it's a safe bet he continued because he enjoyed the taste! 

   The Sun King himself, as Louis XIV was known, became a tea drinker in  1665. He thought it would help his gout, too, and also had been told  that the Chinese and Japanese never suffered from heart problems.  Tea was so popular in Paris that Madame de Sévigné, who chronicled the  doings of the Sun King and his cronies in a famous series of gossipy  letters to her daughter, often found herself mentioning tea. "Saw the  Princesse de Tarente [de Sévigné wrote]... who takes 12 cups of tea  every day... which, she says, cures all her ills.  She assured me that Monsieur de Landgrave drank  40 cups every morning. 'But Madame, perhaps it is really only 30 or so.'  'No, 40. He was dying, and it brought him back to life before our  eyes.' 
  
 Madame de Sévigné also reported that it was a Frenchwoman, the Marquise  de la Sablière, who initiated the fashion of adding milk to tea. "Madame  de la Sablière took her tea with milk, as she told me the other day,  because it was to her taste." (By the way, the English delighted in this  "French touch" and immediately adopted it.) 
   French doctors got excited about tea because they saw it as a possible  medicine. As early as 1648, a Monsieur Morisset published a treatise  claiming that tea was mentally stimulating. (However, when he brought it  before the faculty of medicine at the University of Paris some ardent  defenders of another medicinal plant, sage, had the treatise burned!) In  1657, the scientist Jonquet praised tea as the "divine herb." In 1685,  Philippe Sylvestre Dufour published the Traités Nouveaux et Curieux du  Café, du Thé et du Chocolat (New and Curious Treatises on Coffee, Tea  and Chocolate), one of the first books in French to address tea. It extolled the leaf for its ability to cure  headaches and aid digestion, and it even offered prescriptions. 

  
 On August 3, 1700, the French ship Amphitrite returned from China with  silk, porcelain and, of course, tea. In the years that followed, the  number of these ships was to increase tenfold. Tea had many fervent  supporters in Paris and in Versailles, where the Sun King held court. As  well as Mazarin, the royal minister Chancellor Séguier, the playwright  Racine, and the writer Madame de Genlis all drank tea. In 1714, the  princess of Palatine remarked that 
Chinese tea was as fashionable in Paris as chocolate was in Spain. 
   However, popularity among the upper classes may have been the kiss of  death for tea in France. In 1789, a screaming mob, enraged by a noble  class that did nothing but levy crippling taxes and make war, attacked  the notorious Bastille prison. By the time the violence stopped, the  king and queen had lost their heads and so had a goodly number of  counts, dukes, and the like. Tea, a symbol of royalty, went the way of  royalty. Tea's story was not over in France, however. Only 50 years  after the Revolution, an Anglomania swept the country.  Everything  English was all the fashion and it again became stylish to take tea,  often in the evening after dinner and accompanied by small pastries. 

It  was around this time that the famous French tea importer, Mariage  Frères, began to expand its business. Jean-François Mariage had been  running an import firm featuring teas, spices and colonial goods in  Lille, a city to the north of Paris, since the late 1700s.  He trained  his four sons—Louis, Aimé, Charles, and Auguste—in the family business.  Aimé's sons, Henri and Edouard Mariage, in turn took up the family  trade. On June 1, 1854, they founded the Mariage Frères (Mariage  Brothers) tea company in Paris, today the oldest in France. 
Mariage Frères quickly demonstrated what has become its  trademark—interesting blends. In 1860, the company came out with  "Chocolat des Mandarins," a tea/chocolate blend touted as a healthy way  to consume chocolate, which was considered difficult to digest. Today  the Mariage Frères catalogue lists 213 blends among its selection of  more than 500 teas. Also available are tea-flavored cookies, tea candy,  tea-scented candles, and tea jellies, a French invention now found in  shops from Kyoto to New York. And it's only a beginning. 
Tea is growing  more and more popular in France, especially in Paris. Three "tea  drinkers' clubs" meet regularly to drink and talk about tea. French tea  aficionados can study their passion at the "Université du Thé"  (University of Tea) and the "Ecole du Thé" (School of Tea). Nearly 145  tearooms do excellent business in Paris and more open every year.  Four-star chefs even use tea as an ingredient in appetizers, main  courses, and desserts. 
French drinkers of tea pride themselves on their  diverse tastes, from English-style blends to Japanese greens to Chinese  whites. They practice what they call the "French art of tea," which  simply consists of quality ingredients, careful preparation, and elegant  presentation. Removing the leaves from the pot immediately after the  tea is infused is especially considered the first principle of French  tea preparation. A marked interest for teas grown on specific estates is  another hallmark of the French approach to tea. Sound familiar? You're  right. 
The French are bringing to tea the same seriousness they have  always devoted to wine. In short, tea may finally have recovered from  the French Revolution and be rightfully taking its place in France! 
By Karen Burns, Tea Muse 
Images: La Chanelphile, Laduree and Hip Paris