A Note on Attribution
The section is transmitted within Gao Lian’s Zunsheng Bajian, a broad late-Ming work on cultivation, connoisseurship, objects, and daily life. Some later catalogues and popular accounts attribute a text titled Fenxiang Qiyao, or Seven Essentials of Burning Incense, to the earlier Ming prince Zhu Quan. Because the exact textual relationship deserves specialist study, this article takes the conservative approach: it cites the version preserved in Zunsheng Bajian and does not claim to resolve authorship.
This kind of attribution note is part of E-E-A-T. A transparent uncertainty is more trustworthy than a confident but unstable author claim.
1. The Incense Burner
The burner is the central vessel, but the text evaluates it in practical terms. It distinguishes objects suitable for display from those suitable for sustained daily use and shows a preference for forms that can safely hold ash and charcoal. The point is not that one historical material is universally superior. It is that a burner must be judged by the method it supports.
For modern readers, this encourages a functional question: is the vessel designed for a stick, a cone, loose powder, or indirect heating? A beautiful object can still be poorly matched to a particular incense form.
2. The Incense Box
The box stores and separates aromatic materials. The passage differentiates containers by the types of incense placed within them, including molded cakes and costly woods. Storage was therefore part of use: fragrance had to be protected, organized, and carried before it reached the burner.
A contemporary adaptation should focus on clean, dry, clearly labeled storage. Historical recommendations about lacquer, metal, or ceramic are valuable evidence of material culture, but they should not be converted into absolute modern preservation rules without testing the product itself.
3. Prepared Burner Ash
The text gives a recipe for preparing ash and warns that unsuitable charcoal contamination can cause the heat to die. Ash was not merely residue. It was a thermal medium that held, insulated, and regulated the charcoal.
This is one of the clearest differences between indirect heating and lighting a modern incense stick. In indirect heating, the condition and depth of the ash influence oxygen flow and heat transfer.
4. The Charcoal Cake
The charcoal cake, or tanji, was formed from powdered charcoal with plant material and a binder, then pressed hard so it would burn steadily. The recipe shows an effort to engineer a consistent heat source rather than rely on an irregular open flame.
Bifang should present this as a historical formula, not a casual home DIY recommendation. Traditional binders, fuel composition, indoor ventilation, and fire risk all require caution. Modern purpose-made incense charcoal is safer for readers who wish to explore indirect heating.
5. The Heat-Separating Shard
The most technically revealing section explains that strong heat can make aroma flare and vanish quickly. A thin shard placed above the buried charcoal moderated the heat so fragrance emerged gradually. The text criticizes materials that become too hot and recommends a fired pottery fragment of controlled thickness.
The principle is more important than copying the exact object: aromatic wood is warmed across a barrier rather than placed directly on a flame. This can produce less visible smoke and a slower sequence of scent, although the outcome depends on material, temperature, distance, and ventilation.
6. Conditioned or “Living” Ash
The term linghui describes ash maintained through repeated use and kept sufficiently dry. The passage notes that prolonged disuse or damp weather can make ash hold moisture and extinguish charcoal. The language of ash becoming ‘living’ is historical craft vocabulary, not a supernatural property that needs to be repeated literally in modern instructions.
In practical terms, the section records a user’s awareness of humidity, fuel, and thermal continuity.
7. Spoon and Chopsticks
Small tools completed the system. A spoon or spatula moved ash and fragrance; chopsticks positioned charcoal and opened channels for air. The text’s attention to tool material and the stability of the utensil holder shows that handling was part of refined use.
Modern stainless-steel or brass tools may serve the same functions. The goal is precise handling and reduced contact with hot surfaces, not archaeological imitation.

What the Seven Essentials Reveal
Together, the seven items describe a controlled chain: store the aromatic material, prepare a stable heat source, insulate it with ash, moderate the heat through a barrier, maintain airflow, and handle everything with dedicated tools. The fragrance emerges from the relationship among objects.
This is useful for Bifang because it allows product education to move beyond the vague phrase ‘incense ritual.’ A ritual can be explained as a sequence of material decisions—vessel, heat, distance, time, and attention.
Historical Record, Not a Universal Rule
The list reflects a particular late-Ming connoisseurial context. It does not prove that every Chinese household used seven pieces, nor that this was the only way to burn incense. Religious offering, domestic fumigation, stick incense, powder trails, and other methods followed different material logics.
A rigorous article therefore says ‘this text records’ rather than ‘the Chinese always used.’
