Arabian In most
Arab countries, incense is burned in the form of scented chips or blocks called ( ). Incense is used on special occasions like
weddings or on Fridays or generally to perfume the house. The is usually burned in a ( or ), a traditional incense burner (
censer) similar to the Somali . It is customary in many Arab countries to pass among the guests in the (, 'congregation'). This is done as a gesture of
hospitality.
Chinese in
Beijing, China For over two thousand years, the Chinese have used incense in religious ceremonies,
ancestor veneration,
traditional Chinese medicine, and daily life.
Agarwood () and
sandalwood () are the two most important ingredients in Chinese incense. Along with the introduction of
Buddhism in China came calibrated incense sticks and
incense clocks. The first known record is by poet Yu Jianwu (487–551): "By burning incense we know the o'clock of the night, With graduated candles we confirm the tally of the watches." The use of these incense timekeeping devices spread from Buddhist monasteries into Chinese secular society. Incense-stick burning is an everyday practice in traditional
Chinese religion. There are many different types of sticks used for different purposes or on different festive days. Many of them are long and thin. Sticks are mostly coloured yellow, red, or more rarely, black. Thick sticks are used for special ceremonies, such as funerals. Spiral incense, with exceedingly long burn times, is often hung from temple ceilings. In some states, such as Taiwan, Singapore, or Malaysia, where they celebrate the
Ghost Festival, large, pillar-like dragon incense sticks are sometimes used. These generate so much smoke and heat that they are only burned outside. Chinese incense sticks used in popular religion are generally odorless or only use the slightest trace of jasmine or rose, since it is the smoke, not the scent, which is important in conveying the prayers of the faithful to heaven. They are composed of the dried powdered bark of a non-scented species of
cinnamon native to Cambodia,
Cinnamomum cambodianum. Inexpensive packs of 300 are often found for sale in Chinese supermarkets. Though they contain no sandalwood, they often include the Chinese character for sandalwood on the label, as a generic term for incense. Highly scented Chinese incense sticks are used by some Buddhists. These are often quite expensive due to the use of large amounts of sandalwood,
agarwood, or floral scents. The
sandalwood used in Chinese incenses does not come from India, its native home, but rather from groves planted within Chinese territory. Sites belonging to
Tzu Chi,
Chung Tai Shan,
Dharma Drum Mountain,
Xingtian Temple, or
City of Ten Thousand Buddhas do not use incense.
Christian parish church belonging to the
Church of Sweden. , with a thurible, in the Catholic and Lutheran traditions The use of incense in Christianity is inspired by passages in the
Bible; its use in prayer and worship carries with it a
Christian symbolism. Incense is used in Christian churches, including the
Roman Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox,
Assyrian Church of the East,
Oriental Orthodox,
Lutheran and
Old Catholic denominations, as well as in some
Methodist,
Continental Reformed,
Presbyterian, and
Anglican churches. A
thurible is used to hold the burning incense. Each thurible consists of a censer section, chains to hold and swing it, a perforated lid, and a
crucible in which burning charcoal is placed. The incense is placed directly upon the charcoal, where it melts to produce a sweet smelling smoke. This may be done several times during the religious service as the incense burns quite quickly. The thurible is swung by its chains to fan the charcoal, to produce copious smoke, and to distribute the smoke.
Indian Incense sticks, also known as () and joss sticks, in which an incense paste is rolled or moulded around a bamboo stick, are the main forms of incense in India. The bamboo method originated in India and is distinct from the Nepali, Tibetan, and Japanese methods of stick making without bamboo cores. The basic ingredients are the bamboo stick, the paste (generally made of charcoal dust and joss/jiggit/gum/tabu powder – an adhesive made from the bark of
litsea glutinosa and other trees), and the perfume ingredients - which would be a masala (
spice mix) powder of ground ingredients into which the stick would be rolled, or a perfume liquid sometimes consisting of synthetic ingredients into which the stick would be dipped. Perfume is sometimes sprayed on the coated sticks. Stick machines are sometimes used, which coat the stick with paste and perfume, though the bulk of production is done by hand rolling at home. There are about 5,000 incense companies in India that take raw unperfumed sticks hand-rolled by approximately 200,000 women working part-time at home, and then apply their own brand of perfume, and package the sticks for sale. An experienced home-worker can produce 4,000 raw sticks a day. There are about 50 large companies that together account for up to 30% of the market, and around 500 of the companies, including a significant number of the main ones, including Moksh Agarbatti,
PremaNature, and
Cycle Pure, are based in Mysore.
Jewish Temple in Jerusalem Ketoret () was the incense offered in the
Temple in Jerusalem and is stated in the
Book of Exodus to be a mixture of
stacte,
onycha,
galbanum and
frankincense.
Japanese In Japan incense appreciation
folklore includes art, culture, history, and ceremony. Incense burning may occasionally take place within the
tea ceremony, just like
calligraphy,
ikebana, and
scroll arrangement. , the art of incense appreciation, is generally practiced as a separate art form from the tea ceremony, and usually within a tea room of traditional Zen design. and are the two most important ingredients in Japanese incense. The characters in agarwood mean "incense that sinks in water" due to the weight of the resin in the wood. Sandalwood is used in the
Japanese tea ceremony. The most valued sandalwood comes from
Mysore in the state of
Karnataka in India. Japanese incense companies divide agarwood into six categories depending on its properties and the region from which it is obtained. , a type of agarwood, is currently worth more than its weight in gold. ==Usage==