|

Candles have been used for light and to illuminate man's celebrations
for more than 5,000 years, yet little is known about their origin.
It is often written that the first candles were developed by the
Ancient Egyptians, who used rushlights or torches made by soaking the
pithy core of reeds in melted animal fat. However, the rushlights had no
wick like a true candle.
Early Wicked Candles
The Egyptians were using wicked candles in 3,000 B.C., but the
ancient Romans are generally credited with developing the wicked candle
before that time by dipping rolled papyrus repeatedly in melted tallow
or beeswax. The resulting candles were used to light their homes, to aid
travelers at night, and in religious ceremonies.
Historians have found evidence that many other early civilizations
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.
It is also known that candles played an important role in early
religious ceremonies. Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of Lights which
centers on the lighting of candles, dates back to 165 B.C. There are
several Biblical references to candles, and the Emperor Constantine is
reported to have called for the use of candles during an Easter service
in the 4th century.
Middle Ages
Most early Western cultures relied primarily on candles rendered from
animal fat (tallow). A major improvement came in the Middle Ages, 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, acrid odor of
tallow. Beeswax candles were widely used for church ceremonies, but
because they were expensive, few individuals other than the wealthy
could afford to burn them in the 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 from small candle shops.
Colonial Times
Colonial women offered America's first contribution to candlemaking,
when they discovered that boiling the grayish-green berries of bayberry
bushes produced a sweet-smelling wax that burned cleanly. However,
extracting the wax from the bayberries 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 crystallizing sperm whale oil -- became
available in quantity. Like beeswax, the spermaceti wax did not elicit 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 heat. Historians note that the first "standard
candles" were made from spermaceti wax.
19th Century Advances
Most of the major developments impacting contemporary candlemaking
occurred during the 19th century. In the 1820s, French chemist Michel
Eugene Chevreul discovered how to extract stearic acid from animal fatty
acids. This lead to the development of stearin wax, which was hard,
durable and burned cleanly. Stearin candles remain popular in Europe
today.
In 1834, inventor Joseph Morgan helped to further the modern-day
candle industry by developing a machine that allowed for continuous
production of molded candles by using a cylinder with a movable piston
to eject candles as they solidified. With the introduction of mechanized
production, candles became an easily affordable commodity for the
masses.
Paraffin wax was introduced in the 1850s, after chemists learned how
to efficiently separate the naturally-occurring waxy substance from
petroleum and refine it. Odorless and bluish-white in color, paraffin
was a boon to candlemaking because it burned cleanly, consistently and
was more economical to produce than any other candle fuel. Its only
disadvantage was a low melting point. This was soon overcome by adding
the harder stearic acid, which had become widely available. With the
introduction of the light bulb in 1879, candlemaking began to decline.
The 20th Century
Candles enjoyed renewed popularity during the first half of the 20th
century, when the growth of U.S. oil and meatpacking industries brought
an increase in the byproducts that had become the basic ingredients of
candles – paraffin and stearic acid.
The popularity of candles remained steady until the mid-1980s, when
interest in candles as decorative items, mood-setters and gifts began to
increase notably. Candles were suddenly available in a broad array of
sizes, shapes and colors, and consumer interest in scented candles began
to escalate.
The 1990s witnessed an unprecedented surge in the popularity of
candles, and for the first time in more than a century, new types of
candle waxes were being developed. In the U.S., agricultural chemists
began to develop soybean wax, a softer and slower burning wax than
paraffin. On the other side of the globe, efforts were underway to
develop palm wax for use in candles.
Today's Candles
Candles have come a long way since their initial use. Although no longer
man's major source of light, they continue to grow in popularity and
use. Today, candles symbolize celebration, mark romance, soothe the
senses, define ceremony, and accent home decors — casting a warm and
lovely glow for all to enjoy. |