When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: incense smells and their purpose

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Incense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incense

    Incense made from materials such as citronella can repel mosquitoes and other irritating, distracting, or pestilential insects. This use has been deployed in concert with religious uses by Zen Buddhists, who claim that the incense that is part of their meditative practice is designed to keep bothersome insects from distracting the practitioner.

  3. Religious use of incense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_use_of_incense

    Incense smoke wafts from huge burners in Lhasa, Tibet. The first recorded use of incense was by the Indians in the Indus Valley Civilisation in 3600 BC. Egyptians during the Fifth Dynasty, 2345-2494 BC were the first in the non-Asian world to discover the use of incense, which was used by Hindus for centuries by the time of the 5th Dynasty. [1]

  4. Kōdō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kōdō

    The art of enjoying incense, with all its preparatory aspects, is called monkō (聞香), which translated means "listening to incense" (although the 聞 Kanji also means "to smell" in Chinese). The aim is to let the aroma of the material infuse the body and soul and "listen" to its essence in a holistic manner, as opposed to just reducing it ...

  5. Onycha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onycha

    The tree, which grows in Arabia, produces a gum that was used in antiquity as an incense. It was one of the substances used in incense in ancient Egypt. As an incense it produces a sweet, spicy smell that some consider similar, although less bitter than, myrrh, combined with the scent of mushroom.

  6. Incense in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incense_in_Japan

    Fragrant scent played an important role at court during the Heian period (image from The Tale of Genji by Tosa Mitsuoki, 1617–91.). Nihon Shoki, a book of classical Japanese history, gives the first formal record of incense in Japan when a log of agarwood, a fragrant wood used in incense burning, drifted ashore on Awaji Island during the Asuka period in 595 CE, and was presented to Prince ...

  7. Incense in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incense_in_China

    Incense powder is formed into the final product through various methods. [12] In the Lin-xiang process incense powder is tossed over wet sticks. Nuo-xiang is when incense paste is kneaded around sticks. For large incense pillars, incense paste is piled around a single bamboo stick and sculpted to shape.