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SOAP

Communications protocol

OverviewStructured DataIssuesContributors

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babbie elf
edited on 21 Feb, 2022
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People have used soap for centuries and it continues to be widely used as a cleansing agent, mild antiseptic and ingestible antidote to some forms of poisoning. Soap can be produced by a simple process called saponification that takes place when a fatty acid comes in contact with an alkali. When fats or oils, which contain fatty acids, are combined with a strong alkali, the alkali first splits the fats or oils into fatty acids and glycerin. After that, the sodium or potassium part of the alkali joins with the fatty acid part of the fat or oils. This mixture is called soap or the potassium or sodium salt of the fatty acid. So, soap is a cleansing agent created by the combination of fats and oils with an alkaline base.

Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

SOAP

hygiene product

Timeline

February 21, 2022

The name “soap” is derived from the fictional Mount Sapo, which is mentioned in an ancient Roman legend.

February 21, 2022

Soap is made from alkali and animal fat (tallow). Because of its natural origins, soap is both environmentally friendly and biodegradable.

February 21, 2022

Soap has been around for at least 4,800 years: even the ancient Egyptians used a substance that was similar to our modern soap.

February 21, 2022

In the nineteenth century, Italy, Spain and France were the soap capitals of the world.
Edits on 16 Feb, 2022
babbie elf profile picture
babbie elf
edited on 16 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
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Article

Interesting Facts and Information about Soap - History and Today

People have used soap for centuries and it continues to be widely used as a cleansing agent, mild antiseptic and ingestible antidote to some forms of poisoning. Soap can be produced by a simple process called saponification that takes place when a fatty acid comes in contact with an alkali. When fats or oils, which contain fatty acids, are combined with a strong alkali, the alkali first splits the fats or oils into fatty acids and glycerin. After that, the sodium or potassium part of the alkali joins with the fatty acid part of the fat or oils. This mixture is called soap or the potassium or sodium salt of the fatty acid. So, soap is a cleansing agent created by the combination of fats and oils with an alkaline base.

The first recorded evidence of the manufacturing of soap, like materials dates back to around 2800 BC in Ancient Babylon.

The Ebers papyrus (Egypt, 1550BC) reveal that ancient Egyptians bathed regularly and used the combination of animal and plant oils with alkaline salt to produce a soap-like substance.

Phoenicians combined goat's tallow and wood ash to make soap. Celts also produced soap. Soap was popular widely throughout the Roman Empire, and was used primarily as medicine for skin diseases. The purpose of soap as a cleanser appeared in the second century AD. By the eight century, soap was common in France, Italy, and Spain, but the rest of Europe rarely used it until the 17th century.

Soap production began in England around the end of the 12th century. Soap-manufacturers had to pay a heavy tax on all the soap they made. Because of the heavy tax, soap was very expensive, and it came into common use in England after the tax was repealed in 1853. In the 19th century, soap was available and popular throughout Europe.

Early soap makers simply boiled a mixture of wood ash and animal fat. A foam substance that formed at the top of the pot, when cooled, it hardened into soap. Around 1790, French chemist Nicolas Leblanc patented a method of making lye from an ordinary salt, replacing the wood ash as an element of soap. Another French chemist Eugene-Michel Chevreul the chemistry behind the relationship of glycerin and fatty acids and put the soap-forming process (called in English saponification) into concrete chemical terms in 1823.

Soap was manufactured with industrial processes by the end of the 19th century, though people in rural areas continued to produce soap at home. By 1890 many different types of soap were offered, with the five major companies being, Colgate, Morse Taylor, Albert, Pears, and Bailey. In 1933 the first household synthetic detergent was introduced by Procter and Gamble, and the first non-soap heavy-duty laundry product was invented in 1947 by Tide. Now in the 21st century, most soap bars found in the grocery store are actually synthetic detergents. Fortunately, there has been a revival of soap making by the old fashioned process.

babbie elf profile picture
babbie elf
edited on 16 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Article
Article

Interesting Facts and Information about Soap - History and Today

People have used soap for centuries and it continues to be widely used as a cleansing agent, mild antiseptic and ingestible antidote to some forms of poisoning. Soap can be produced by a simple process called saponification that takes place when a fatty acid comes in contact with an alkali. When fats or oils, which contain fatty acids, are combined with a strong alkali, the alkali first splits the fats or oils into fatty acids and glycerin. After that, the sodium or potassium part of the alkali joins with the fatty acid part of the fat or oils. This mixture is called soap or the potassium or sodium salt of the fatty acid. So, soap is a cleansing agent created by the combination of fats and oils with an alkaline base.

The first recorded evidence of the manufacturing of soap, like materials dates back to around 2800 BC in Ancient Babylon.

The Ebers papyrus (Egypt, 1550BC) reveal that ancient Egyptians bathed regularly and used the combination of animal and plant oils with alkaline salt to produce a soap-like substance.

Phoenicians combined goat's tallow and wood ash to make soap. Celts also produced soap. Soap was popular widely throughout the Roman Empire, and was used primarily as medicine for skin diseases. The purpose of soap as a cleanser appeared in the second century AD. By the eight century, soap was common in France, Italy, and Spain, but the rest of Europe rarely used it until the 17th century.

Soap production began in England around the end of the 12th century. Soap-manufacturers had to pay a heavy tax on all the soap they made. Because of the heavy tax, soap was very expensive, and it came into common use in England after the tax was repealed in 1853. In the 19th century, soap was available and popular throughout Europe.

Early soap makers simply boiled a mixture of wood ash and animal fat. A foam substance that formed at the top of the pot, when cooled, it hardened into soap. Around 1790, French chemist Nicolas Leblanc patented a method of making lye from an ordinary salt, replacing the wood ash as an element of soap. Another French chemist Eugene-Michel Chevreul the chemistry behind the relationship of glycerin and fatty acids and put the soap-forming process (called in English saponification) into concrete chemical terms in 1823.

Soap was manufactured with industrial processes by the end of the 19th century, though people in rural areas continued to produce soap at home. By 1890 many different types of soap were offered, with the five major companies being, Colgate, Morse Taylor, Albert, Pears, and Bailey. In 1933 the first household synthetic detergent was introduced by Procter and Gamble, and the first non-soap heavy-duty laundry product was invented in 1947 by Tide. Now in the 21st century, most soap bars found in the grocery store are actually synthetic detergents. Fortunately, there has been a revival of soap making by the old fashioned process.

babbie elf profile picture
babbie elf
edited on 16 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Article
Article

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Soap production began in England around the end of the 12th century. Soap-manufacturers had to pay a heavy tax on all the soap they made. Because of the heavy tax, soap was very expensive, and it came into common use in England after the tax was repealed in 1853. In the 19th century, soap was available and popular throughout Europe.

babbie elf profile picture
babbie elf
edited on 16 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Timeline (+1 events) (+1005 characters)
Description (+106/-23 characters)
Article (+2973 characters)
Table (+1 rows) (+5 cells) (+158 characters)
Table (+1 rows) (+4 cells) (+74 characters)
‌

SOAP

Communications protocol

Soap is a cleansing agent created by the chemical reaction of a fatty acid with an alkali metal hydroxide.

Article

Interesting Facts and Information about Soap - History and Today

People have used soap for centuries and it continues to be widely used as a cleansing agent, mild antiseptic and ingestible antidote to some forms of poisoning. Soap can be produced by a simple process called saponification that takes place when a fatty acid comes in contact with an alkali. When fats or oils, which contain fatty acids, are combined with a strong alkali, the alkali first splits the fats or oils into fatty acids and glycerin. After that, the sodium or potassium part of the alkali joins with the fatty acid part of the fat or oils. This mixture is called soap or the potassium or sodium salt of the fatty acid. So, soap is a cleansing agent created by the combination of fats and oils with an alkaline base.

The first recorded evidence of the manufacturing of soap, like materials dates back to around 2800 BC in Ancient Babylon.

The Ebers papyrus (Egypt, 1550BC) reveal that ancient Egyptians bathed regularly and used the combination of animal and plant oils with alkaline salt to produce a soap-like substance.

Phoenicians combined goat's tallow and wood ash to make soap. Celts also produced soap. Soap was popular widely throughout the Roman Empire, and was used primarily as medicine for skin diseases. The purpose of soap as a cleanser appeared in the second century AD. By the eight century, soap was common in France, Italy, and Spain, but the rest of Europe rarely used it until the 17th century.

Soap production began in England around the end of the 12th century. Soap-manufacturers had to pay a heavy tax on all the soap they made. Because of the heavy tax, soap was very expensive, and it came into common use in England after the tax was repealed in 1853. In the 19th century, soap was available and popular throughout Europe.

Early soap makers simply boiled a mixture of wood ash and animal fat. A foam substance that formed at the top of the pot, when cooled, it hardened into soap. Around 1790, French chemist Nicolas Leblanc patented a method of making lye from an ordinary salt, replacing the wood ash as an element of soap. Another French chemist Eugene-Michel Chevreul the chemistry behind the relationship of glycerin and fatty acids and put the soap-forming process (called in English saponification) into concrete chemical terms in 1823.

Soap was manufactured with industrial processes by the end of the 19th century, though people in rural areas continued to produce soap at home. By 1890 many different types of soap were offered, with the five major companies being, Colgate, Morse Taylor, Albert, Pears, and Bailey. In 1933 the first household synthetic detergent was introduced by Procter and Gamble, and the first non-soap heavy-duty laundry product was invented in 1947 by Tide. Now in the 21st century, most soap bars found in the grocery store are actually synthetic detergents. Fortunately, there has been a revival of soap making by the old fashioned process.

Table

Title
Author
Link
Type
Date

Soap bubbles, their colours and the forces which mold them

Sir Charles Vernon Boys

https://www.amazon.com/Soap-Bubbles-Their-Colors-Forces/dp/0486205428

Book

1959

Table

Title
Date
Link

The Fascinating History of Soap

May 22, 2020

https://youtu.be/xAAjfdiLVLs

Timeline

February 16, 2022

Bath soaps currently represent a multi-billion dollar industry that is largely bolstered by an ever increasing awareness of the importance of hygiene and a thriving, almost aggressive, marketing industry. Although soap may no longer seem in need of much promotion, the advertising industry was once keen to exploit the new idea of soap as a necessity item by inextricably linking it with symbols of vitality like sunlight and honey – a trend that persists to this day. Such marketing campaigns were propelled by the inclusion of exotic and desirable ingredients in soap recipes, including brightly coloured oil palm from West Africa and copra (dried coconut flesh) from the Pacific Islands. These marketing decisions were fundamental in changing soap’s image from a coarse, abrasive scrubbing tool to a healthy, gentle, and fragrant – yet affordable – balm. Today, soap in one form or another continues to generate massive revenue around the world and shows no sign of losing its impressive global status.

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