Do you know how candles came?
Candles have been in use for thousands of years, yet little is known
about their origin. There is no historical record of the first candles
used by man, however clay candle holders dating from the 4th century
B.C. have been found in Eygpt. The earliest people credited with
developing the "wicked" candle are the ancient Romans, before 3,000 B.C.

They used rolled papyrus and dipped it repeatedly in melted tallow
(cattle or sheep fat) or beeswax. There is evidence in other
civilisations, around that same time, that also developed wicked candles
using waxes made from available plants and insects.
Early Chinese candles are said to have been molded in paper tubes,
using rolled rice paper for the wick, and wax from an indigenous insect
that was combined with seeds. In Japan, candles were made of wax
extracted from tree nuts, while in India, candle wax was made by boiling
the fruit of the cinnamon tree.
The first known candle in America dates to the 1st century A.D.,
Native Americans burned oily fish(candlefish) wedged into a forked
stick. Early missionaries in the southwestern United States boiled the
bark of the Cerio tree and skimmed the wax.
In the middle ages most western cultures relied primarily on candles
made from animal fat(tallow). A major improvement came when beeswax
candles were introduced in Europe. Unlike animal-based tallow, beeswax
burned pure and cleanly, without producing a smoky flame. It also
emitted a pleasant sweet, smell rather than the foul, bitter odour of
tallow.
Beeswax candles were widely used for church ceremonies, but because
they were expensive, few individuals other than the wealth could afford
them in their home. Tallow candles were the common household candle for
Europeans, and by the 13th century, candlemaking had become a guild
craft in England and France.
The candlemakers(chandlers) went from house to house making candles
from the kitchen fats saved for that purpose, or made and sold their own
candles form small candle shops.
In America, the colonial women discovered that boiling the
grayish-green berries of bayberry bushes produced a sweet-smelling wax
that burned cleanly. However, extracting the wax from the berries was
extremely tedious. As a result, the popularity of bayberry candles soon
diminished.
The growth of the whaling industry in the late 18th century brought
the first major change in candlemaking since the Middle Ages,when
spermaceti, a wax obtained by crystallising sperm whale oil, became
available in quantity. Like beeswax, the spermaceti wax did not elict a
repugnant odor when burned, and produced a significantly brighter light.
It also was harder than either tallow or beeswax, so it wouldn't soften
or bend in the summer.
Today's candle is vastly different from the candles of old, the
industry has grown and matured into a well oiled machine. You can
purchase almost any type, size, style, or fragrance of your choice. And
the internet has made it easier to come by candles than ever before
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