Curved stone lamps were found in places dated to the
10th millennium BC (
Mesolithic,
Middle Stone Age Period, c. 10,300–8000 BC). The oldest stone-oil lamp was found in
Lascaux in 1940 in a cave that was inhabited 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. ,
Kunshan,
Suzhou Some archaeologists claim that the first shell-lamps existed more than 6,000 years ago (
Neolithic,
Later Stone Age, c. 8500–4500 BC). They believe that the alabaster shell-shaped lamps dug up in
Sumerian sites dating to 2600 BC were imitations of real shell-lamps that had been used for a long time (
Early Bronze Age,
Canaanite/
Bronze I–IV, c. 3300–2000 BC). It is generally agreed that the evolution of handmade lamps moved from bowl-shaped to saucer-shaped, then from saucer with a nozzle, to a closed bowl with a spout.
Chalcolithic Age (4500–3300 BC) The first manufactured red pottery oil lamps appeared in the
Chalcolithic. These were of the round bowl type.
Bronze Age (3200–1200 BC) Bronze Age lamps were simple wheel-made bowls with a slight pinch on four sides for the wick. Later lamps had only one pinch. These lamps vary in the shape of the rim, the general shape of the bowl and the shape of the base.
Intermediate Bronze Age (EBIV/MBI) A design with four spouts for wicks appeared in the Intermediate Bronze Age (2300-2000 BC). Lamps are made from large bowls with flattened bases for stability, and four equally spaced shallow pinches in the rim for wicks, although some lamps with only a single pinch have also been found. The four-spout design evolved to provide sufficient light when fueled with fish or animal oils, which burn less efficiently than olive oil.
Middle Bronze Age lamps (MB) The four-wick oil lamps persist into this period. However, most lamps now have only one wick. Early in this period the pinch is shallow, while later on it becomes more prominent and the mouth protrudes from the lamp's body. The bases are simple and flat. The crude
potter's wheel is introduced, transforming the handmade bowls to a more uniform container. The saucer style evolves into a single spout shape.
Late Bronze Age lamps (LB) A more pronounced, deeper single spout is developed, and it is almost closed on the sides. The shape is evolving to be more triangular, deeper and larger. All lamps are now wheel-made, with simple and usually flat bases.
Iron Age (1200–560 BC) During the
Iron Age, lamp rims become wider and flatter, with a deeper and higher spout. The tip of the spout is more upright in contrast to the rest of the rim. The lamps are becoming variable in shape and distribution, although some remain similar to lamps from the Late Bronze period. In addition, other forms evolve, such as small lamps with a flat base and larger lamps with a round base. The later form continues into the
Iron Age II. In the later Iron Age, variant forms appear. One common type is small, with a wide rim and a wide base. Another type is a small, shallow bowl with a thick and high discus base.
Arctic The
qulliq (seal-oil lamp) provided warmth and light in the harsh Arctic environment where there was no wood and where the sparse population relied almost entirely on seal oil. This lamp was the most important article of furniture for the
Inuit,
Yupik and other
Inuit peoples. The lamps were made of stone and their sizes and shapes of lamps could be different, but mostly were elliptical or half-moon shaped. The wicks were mostly made of dried moss or
cottongrass and were lit along the edge of the lamp. A slab of seal blubber could be left to melt over the lamp feeding it with more fat.
Chinese The earliest Chinese oil lamps are dated from the
Warring States period (481–221 BC). The ancient Chinese created oil lamps with a refillable reservoir and a fibrous wick, giving the lamp a controlled flame. Lamps were constructed from
jade, bronze, ceramic, wood, stone, and other materials. The largest oil lamp excavated so far is one discovered in a 4th-century tomb located in modern Pingshan, Hebei.
Early Islamic There is a transition period from Byzantine to Islamic lamps. The decoration on lamps of this transition period changed from crosses, animals, human likenesses, birds, or fish to plain linear, geometric, and raised-dot patterns. The early Islamic lamps continued the traditions of Byzantine lamps. Decorations were initially a stylized form of a bird, grain, tree, plant, or flower. Later, they became entirely geometric or linear with raised dots. An early description of the
kerosene lamp comes from 9th-century
Baghdad by
al-Razi (Rhazes). He referred to it as the in his ('Book of Secrets'). In the transition period, some lamps had Arabic writing. Writing later disappears until the
Mamluk period (13th to 15th century AD).
Late Middle Age Early Christian and late antique oil lamps were diverse. One of the most notable ones were Mediterranean sigillata (“African”) lamps. The motifs were largely geometric, vegetative and graphic (monograms), with figural depiction of animals and human figures, often Christ. Those depicting Christ or the Chi Rho often categorized as Hayes Type II.
Industrial age Oil burning carriage lamps provided a model for the first
bicycle lamps in the 1860s. ==Regional variations==