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Quala's World Match Boxes
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Ancient Chinese Technology - MatchesA late-eighteenth century painting of a boy selling joss-sticks and matches 
 
Every time we strike a match, we are using a Chinese invention. The first version of a match was invented in the year 577 AD by impoverished court ladies during a military siege, in the short-lived Chinese kingdom of the Northern Ch'i. Hard-pressed during the siege, they must have been so short of tinder that they could otherwise not start fires for cooking, heating, etc. Early matches were made with sulfur. A description is found in a book entitled Records of the Unworldly and the Strange written about 950 by T'ao Ku: If there occurs an emergency at night it may take some time to make a light to light a lamp. But an ingenious man devised the system of impregnating little sticks of pinewood with sulphur and storing them ready for use. At the slightest touch of fire they burst into flame. One gets a little flame like an ear of corn. This marvellous thing was formerly called a 'light-bringing slave', but afterwards when it became an article of commerce its name was changed to 'fire inch-stick'. There is no evidence of matches in Europe before 1530. Therefore, the Chinese were using them for just short of a thousand years before they arrived in Europe. Matches could easily have been brought to Europe by one of the Europeans traveling to China at the time of Marco Polo, since we know for certain that they were being sold in the street markets of Hangchow in the year 1270 or thereabouts.

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