Shop for elegant teaware and tea accessories made of glass, ceramic, and cast iron. The teapot commemorates the repeal of the Stamp Act, a 1765 law (enacted eight years before the Boston Tea Party!) which had required colonists to affix taxed stamps to printed materials.
The direct tax was designed to raise revenue for an impoverished Britain after the Seven Years War but was not viewed as particularly innovative within Parliament. The pot could also represent support for the repeal solely because the end of the tax meant the end of colonial nonimportation. The ‘No Stamp Act’ teapot was intended to be consumed in celebration of the presumed success of nonconsumption in preventing the execution of the stamp tax.
True, the teapot embodies Anglo-American debates on taxation and consumption, but it also serves as a tangible product of the British tea and pottery trades. The return of British ceramics to the lucrative American market. By pouring, admiring, and drinking from the ceramics of the tea service, Anglo-Americans gained a tangible connection to the world of goods created through the East India Company (EIC) trade in tea.
With this set, it will bring much convenience to your drinking
Tea Pet experience. Through ***yzing tea bears in ancient paintings, the development history of tea bears and features of each historical period are clarified.