10 Seafaring Cities that Shaped the Global History of Soap – Series Introduction

10 Seafaring Cities that Shaped the Global History of Soap – Series Introduction

⚓︎ 10 Seafaring Cities
That Shaped Soap

Why Ports Matter to Soap

Long before global logistics became a spreadsheet, the business of getting clean depended on wind, sail, and bustling harbours. Olive oil, barilla ash, palm kernels, spices, and fragrant resins had to cross seas before they ever touched a soap‑maker’s vat. Each port wove its own ingredient story, blending local craft with goods from faraway shores.

At Soapyard – hand‑milling our colourful savonnettes de Provence on the edge of Marseille – we owe our very existence to this salt‑sprayed network. Over the coming weeks we’ll dive into ten remarkable cities, each with a distinct role in the rise of soap: part chemistry lesson, part social history, all anchored by the sea.

Meet the Ten Ports on Our Itinerary

# City Why It Earned a Place in Soap Lore
1 Marseille, France Royal edicts, 72 % olive‑oil cubes, and four surviving cauldron factories
2 Genoa, Italy Taggiasca olive oil and Ligurian workshops that rivalled their Provençal cousins
3 Amsterdam, Netherlands Global VOC imports and a cultural obsession with cleanliness
4 Aleppo, Syria The original hard soap of olive and laurel that inspired them all
5 Tripoli, Lebanon Centuries‑old soap souks still carving bars by hand today
6 Venice, Italy Guild‑regulated luxury soaps traded from Constantinople to the North Sea
7 Naples, Italy Perfumed Neapolitan bars that became the status scent of 18th‑century Europe
8 Liverpool, England Palm‑oil imports, Port Sunlight, and the birth of industrial household soap
9 Zanzibar, Tanzania Spice‑island coconut oil that scented Victorian drawing‑rooms
10 Alicante & Valencia, Spain Castile soap, barilla ash, and the Spanish routes that fed Europe’s laundries

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