The History of French Marseille Soap (Savon de Marseille)?


Savon de Marseille (French Marseille Soap), is believed to be the most excellent soap in the world. Renowned for its powerful cleaning abilities for laundry and general household cleaning, it is also suitable to people with sensitive skin, including babies, through to its hypoallergenic qualities. 

Traditional Marseille Soap is composed of 72 per cent of fatty acid (vegetal origin), resulting from the mixing of oils and soda-ash or sea salt and 28 per cent water.

So, how did the manufacture of this beautiful Savon de Marseille begin?

 

THE ORIGIN

The origin of Savon de Marseille comes from the introduction of Aleppo soap, which has existed for thousands of years. The method of manufacture originated in the city of Aleppo in Syria and involving a basis of olive oil and laurel oil. This method spread throughout the Mediterranean basin in the wake of the crusades, passing through Italy and Spain, before reaching Marseille. 

 

FIRST 'SAVONNERIES' (SOAP FACTORIES)

A man named Crescas Davin was the first Marseille soap maker in the 14th Century, and in 1593 a man named Georges Prunemoyr opened the first soap factory in Marseille when demand began to exceed local needs.

By 1660 seven factories in the city used locally produced olive oil as raw material, along with the ash from the burning of the salt marsh plant Salicornia (Glasswort). Production reached almost 20 000 tonnes of soap a year.

In 1688, Louis XIV introduced The Edict of Colbert; a set of regulations limiting the use of the name "Savon de Marseille", to soaps that were:

  • made in and around the Marseille region
  • heated in cauldrons
  • made using only pure virgin olive oil.
  • including no animal fats

Local soap makers who flaunted these rules risked banishment from Provence. 

 

MARSEILLE SOAP GOES VIRAL

The quality of production was such that "Savon de Marseille" became a household name and at that time this green coloured soap was generally sold in 5kg bars or loaves of 20kg. 

By 1786, 48 Marseille factories produced 76 000 tonnes, employing 600 workers and 1500 loaned convicts.

Following the French Revolution in 1789, the manufacture of Savon de Marseille continued to expand and escalated to 62 factories by 1813.

 

savon de marseille cubes

SAVON DE MARSEILLE RECIPES

Around this time, Nicolas Leblanc (1742-1806), invented a process of extracting Soda-ash, one of the principal ingredients, from seawater. 

Toward the 1820s, new oils and fats were imported and passed through the port of Marseille, meaning the more widespread use of oils like palm, copra, peanut and sesame. More factories began to appear throughout the region in places like Salon-de-Provence, Toulon and Arles.

Eventually, instead of the use of the various vegetable oils, the factories turned to the much cheaper tallow (animal fat) due to heavy competition from factories in Paris and indeed England.

In the 19th Century, the city of Marseille with almost 90 factories, had a thriving industry that reached its pinnacle in 1913 with nearly 180 000 tonnes of Marseille soap produced.

 

THE WAR ON MARSEILLE SOAP

After the First World War, the savonneries (soap factories) enjoyed the progress of mechanisation, and without losing the quality of the product due to the utilisation of former processes, production rose again to 120 000 tonnes in 1938. 

When the Second World War broke out, Marseille still represented half of the soap production in France but the following years were to see its decline. Synthetic detergents superseded the soap, and the factories began closing one after the other. 

Nowadays, only a handful of manufacturers remain in the region, but they still manufacture world-beating natural Savon de Marseille ( French Marseille Soap). Our Supplier, Le Serail Soap Factory still produces Marseille Soap the Traditional way: Heated in Cauldron, Hand cut and Air dried. Enjoy a centuries old Traditional French Soap with so many qualities!

 

 Genuine Traditional Marseille Soap   Made in France   Cauldron Heated Soap   No Palm Oil

French Bliss is proud to offer you this authentic French product online. Bliss You!

 

(available Olive & Copra or Copra only in 300g or 150g cubes)

 

If you found the above to be useful information, please like and share this article - it really helps us : )