Roman Candles Get Their Name From A Particularly Cruel Emperor

Prepare to have your vibes harshed
Roman Candles Get Their Name From A Particularly Cruel Emperor

There might not be a single type of firework more treasured by a mischievous child than the Roman candle. It checks every box when it comes to details that make it more dangerous and fun than your standard sparkler tube. It fires honest-to-god projectiles, and even though you technically shouldnt hold it and wave it willy-nilly from acquired target to acquired target, thats what everybody does anyway. 

Even the sternest mother or father, once the candles ammunition is spent and no ones received a permanent scar, will have to admit that its pretty awesome.

So where does the name come from? 

Given everything we already know, it feels like it should come from a place of extreme merriment — maybe an old Roman recipe for celebrations, or a cool ancient weapon. Something wielded by some ancient figure from the pantheon in a tale of myth and legend. At the very least, I would have assumed that it wasnt based on a horrific form of murder carried out by one of historys cruelest emperors.

Public Domain

Well, he definitely doesnt look friendly.

Unfortunately, that seems to be exactly the case. Before anybody was using it to refer to a public park barbecue health hazard, a Roman candle referred to someone, usually a Christian, who was acting as a human candle. Yes, thats just about as straightforward as youd think, because sometimes simplicity can be horrifying too! 

Reportedly a favorite method of Emperor Nero, whoever had made the regrettable mistake of pissing him off enough to get the Roman candle treatment would be tied to a stake and coated in pitch and flammable materials. Then, as candles are, theyd be lit, though from the bottom up, just to maximize suffering.

Happy Fourth of July!

Scroll down for the next article
Forgot Password?