![]() |
Incense-Making.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
|
Stacte, like Onycha, is another mysterious ingredient mentioned in the bible, Exodus 30:34:
The reference doesn't give us any indication as to what Stacte is so like Onycha, we begin again with the name itself, which is an English translation of the Hebrew word "nataph," later revised to "ha'tzori", both of which mean "to drip" or "in drops," and still later evolved to "balm" or "balsam." From here we can dig further...
Around the world Stacte is thought to be one of the following ingredients:
Storax Balsam - a viscous liquid balsam from the Turkish Storax tree, liquidambar orientalis.
Mecca Balsam - a viscous liquid balsam from a balsam tree found growing in the Palestine area.
Myrrh Balsam or Myrrh Oil - the liquid result of pressing fresh myrrh resin, or a more complex process of extracting the oils from fresh myrrh resin. These appear the more likely candidates as the true Stacte. Let us refer to some ancient writings to justify this:
Theophrastus, an ancient Greek botanist, describes Stacte as:
The Gerrhaean tribute to Antiochus III in 205 BC included one thousand talents of frankincense and two hundred of "stacte" myrrh.
The ancient Roman historian Pliny in his famous work "A Natural History," describes stakte as, "the liquid which exuded naturally from the myrrh tree before the gum was collected from man-made incisions." Though it's noted he may have thought so because this resin would be richer in oil and therefore better suited to an extraction process.
In summary, research shows no ancient writings of Stacte being Storax balsam or the elusive Mecca balsam, but much points toward Stacte being either the natural exudate from the Commiphora tree prior to any manmade harvesting, or the liquid result of pressing fresh myrrh resin, or the liquid result of an extraction process such as Dioscorides describes.
|
|
|
![]() All content on this website (including text, photographs, video and audio files, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Visit |
|
|
|
||