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Bama Tea Industry comes from a century-old tea-making family

High-end Chinese tea ranks first in sales nationwide

Bama Tea Industry originates from a century-old tea-making family and gathers the finest teas from Chinese origin. It is a leading brand in China's tea chain and the leading brand in the high-end tea market.As of January 31, 2024, there are nearly 3,500 chain stores nationwide (China).

As a representative inheritor of the national intangible cultural heritage project Oolong tea making skills (Tieguanyin making skills), Bama founded the brand and condensed the nearly 300-year-old Tieguanyin skills into eight tea making processes.

The company strictly uses the Twenty-Four Laws to make good tea. Among them, Anxi Tieguanyin has been the national sales leader for 15 consecutive years. Anxi Tieguanyin and Wuyi Rock Tea have been ranked first in tax payment among tea companies of origin for four consecutive years.

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Originated from 1736 AD - Qianlong period

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Over 3,500 stores nationwide

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Pearl S. Buck has been the sales leader for 15 consecutive years

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High-end Chinese tea ranks first in sales in China

OUR CHAIN STORES

Bamamen Store

OUR HISTORY

Development Path


Wang Shirang
The origin of Tieguanyin
He was named Shangqing and was from Yaoyang, Anxi in the Qing Dynasty. He was the discoverer of Tieguanyin. He was selected as a deputy tribute in the tenth year of Yongzheng's reign. In the sixth year of Qianlong's reign, he was selected as a learned scholar and was invited to the Sanli Hall to edit the "Yili". Later, he became the magistrate of Qizhou, Huangzhou Prefecture, Huguang, and wrote "Six Classics Interpretation".
Wang Zipei
The tenth generation inheritor of Tieguanyin
In his hometown and Nanyang, he inherited and carried forward the Xinji Tea Factory and Tea Shop, which was based on integrity and had great influence locally and overseas. He was elected as a county people's congress representative many times in the early days of the founding of the People's Republic of China.


Wang Xueyao
The eleventh generation inheritor of Tieguanyin
In the early days of the People's Republic of China, he served as the chief tea taster of the state-owned Anxi Tea Factory, the largest oolong tea refined manufacturer at the time. He made great contributions to the development of Anxi tea industry and the expansion of domestic and overseas markets, and trained countless industry elites for the Tieguanyin industry.
Wang Fulong
The 12th generation inheritor of Tieguanyin
In the 1970s, he was the chief tea taster of the state-owned Anxi Eighth Tea Factory, responsible for the evaluation and production of the factory, and founded the Xiyuan Tea Factory in Anxi, Quanzhou. In Quanzhou, where private enterprises are everywhere, he is the only tea entrepreneur who has been named a "founding father".


Wang Wenli
The 13th generation inheritor of Tieguanyin
He is a representative inheritor of the national intangible cultural heritage project Oolong tea making skills (Iron Guanyin making skills), and a leading talent in science and technology entrepreneurship in the fourth batch of the national "Ten Thousand Talents Plan". He is currently the vice president of the Cross-Strait Tea Exchange Association, the vice chairman of the Quanzhou Federation of Industry and Commerce (General Chamber of Commerce), the vice chairman of the Anxi County Political Consultative Conference, the chairman of the Anxi County Federation of Industry and Commerce, and the chairman of the Anxi Tieguanyin Industry Association.