Tuesday, September 20, 2011

History of Oil Lamps

History of Oil Lamps


Oil lamps are a overwhelming way to light your evenings. They bring a nostalgic feel to any setting. They are used in log cabins, historical sites, lodges, hotels, museums, and of course underground residences. They bring the past to life, and are overwhelming if the power goes out.

For ancient man, torches, candles, and crude lamps restricted their activities to daylight hours. It became significant to try to light the darkness. Oil lamps have been around since ancient man used hollowed out stones, or seashells filled with animal fats or pine pitch to light the darkness. The word lamp is derived from the Greek word lampas, meaning torch. As time passed the oil lamp evolved from bowl to saucer shaped with a nozzle or spout which held the wick.

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In the time of the Greeks and Romans, lamps were often made of terra cotta, or clay, and used olive oil or animal fats. The Romans probably made the oil lamp the first mass produced object in history. Lamps were also made of bronze, stone, and alabaster, and were often elaborately decorated.


Oil lamp found did not convert significantly until the 1700's when Swiss chemist, Aime Argand, invented a lamp using a round burner, and a circular wick. Flame was also enhanced by the use of a glass chimney, which protected the flame and controlled the air flow. Lamp oil also evolved. Early fuels included animal fats, pine pitch, olive oil, and beeswax. Whale oil was a common source of lamp oil until the early 1800's when whales became scarcer, and whale oil became very expensive.

In the mid 1800's a process was advanced for converting coal into coal oil. The goods was called kerosene. The early process was less expensive than whale oil, but smoked, and had a disagreeable odor. The process has since been refined, and the cleaner oils used today have virtually no smell and smoke. In the 1850's a process was patented to distill a lubricant call Paraffin oil, which is a petroleum derivative.

Lamp evolution and the hunt for cleaner burning fuels prolonged into the 1800's and advanced most of the lamps we identify today. Of course the introduction of electricity in the late 1800's moderately reduced the use of oil and oil lamps as a main source of light. That doesn't mean the production of oil lamps stopped after the widespread use of electricity. Oil lamps remain very popular today, and are still a major source of light in less advanced parts of the world.

History of Oil Lamps


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