Sometime around the 9th century C.E., alchemists and artisans in China made a discovery that would eventually light up the night skies of nearly every culture on Earth. Gunpowder — first developed in pursuit of immortality, not entertainment — turned out to have a far more spectacular destiny.
What the evidence shows
- Gunpowder origins: Chinese alchemists of the Tang Dynasty (~618–907 C.E.) discovered gunpowder while experimenting with elixirs, and by ~850 C.E. early texts described the combustible mixture of charcoal, sulfur, and potassium nitrate.
- Firecracker development: Bamboo stalks had been thrown into fires since the Han Dynasty (202 B.C.E.–220 C.E.) to produce loud cracks — gunpowder later replaced bamboo, packed into paper tubes to mimic and amplify the same festive sound.
- Song Dynasty fireworks: By the Song Dynasty (960–1279 C.E.), Chinese artisans had developed the first true fireworks — rolled paper tubes filled with gunpowder, strung together in sequences — that vendors sold openly in markets.
From alchemy to celebration
The story of fireworks does not begin with a single inventor or a single moment. It begins with curiosity.
Tang Dynasty alchemists were searching for the elixir of immortality — a goal that now sounds like mythology, but drove serious, systematic experimentation for centuries. In their furnaces and crucibles, they mixed saltpeter, sulfur, and charcoal in different combinations, looking for something transcendent. What they found instead was something explosive.
A 9th-century C.E. Taoist text, the Zhenyuan miaodao yaolüe, contains one of the earliest known written warnings about this mixture — cautioning that certain combinations of these substances had burned down houses and singed the beards of the people experimenting with them. It was not quite the immortality they were looking for. But it was the birth of gunpowder.
The leap from dangerous accident to deliberate celebration followed a cultural logic already in place. For centuries before gunpowder existed, Chinese communities had thrown green bamboo stalks into fire during festivals. The moisture inside caused the bamboo to crack loudly, a sound believed to drive away evil spirits. Gunpowder, once it arrived, could produce that same crack — louder, more reliably, and in a package small enough to hold in your hand.
The craft of pyrotechnics takes shape
By the Song Dynasty, fireworks had become a recognized art and a public spectacle. Pyrotechnicians held respected social status — skilled professionals who understood chemistry, timing, and design in ways that most people around them could not.
Common people could buy firecrackers from market stalls. Grand displays were mounted by the military for the imperial court. A 12th-century C.E. account describes a large fireworks show staged to entertain Emperor Huizong of Song. Another text records a rocket-propelled firework — an early form of rocket propulsion — going off unexpectedly near the Empress Dowager during a feast held in her honor.
These were not just noise-makers. Chinese pyrotechnicians also developed the chemistry of colored fire — using arsenical sulfide for yellow, copper acetate for green, and other compounds to paint the sky in ways that European observers centuries later described as the greatest mystery of Chinese pyrotechny. A French author writing in 1818 C.E. called the variety of colors “the chief merit of their pyrotechny.” An English geographer writing around 1797 C.E. said the same.
How fireworks traveled the world
Knowledge of gunpowder and fireworks spread westward through trade and conflict. Around 1280 C.E., a Syrian scholar named Hasan al-Rammah wrote about rockets and fireworks, using terminology that scholars believe he derived from Chinese sources. He called fireworks “Chinese flowers.”
European nations developed their own fireworks traditions by the 14th century C.E., and by the 17th century C.E. large public displays had become standard features of royal celebrations, military victories, and religious festivals across the continent. The tradition traveled further still, carried by colonizers, traders, and migrants until it became one of the most globally shared forms of public celebration.
George Frideric Handel composed Music for the Royal Fireworks in 1749 C.E. to celebrate a peace treaty. The Russian ambassador to China, Lev Izmailov, reportedly told Peter the Great that Chinese fireworks were beyond anything in Europe. A Jesuit missionary in Beijing wrote to the Paris Academy of Sciences in 1758 C.E. with detailed notes on Chinese fireworks chemistry — notes the Academy published five years later.
Lasting impact
The invention of fireworks was, at its core, the invention of public joy at scale. Before fireworks, large gatherings marked celebrations with music, dance, food, and fire. Fireworks added something new: a shared spectacle that everyone present — regardless of rank, language, or age — experienced together, in the same instant, looking at the same sky.
That shared experience still holds. Fireworks accompany national holidays, religious celebrations, weddings, and sporting events on every continent. The basic chemistry of gunpowder also gave rise to technologies that shaped everything from mining and construction to military history and eventually the space age. Rocket propulsion — tested in a 13th-century C.E. Chinese festival firework that startled an empress — is now the technology that carries humans into orbit.
China today remains the world’s largest manufacturer and exporter of fireworks, a continuity of craft stretching back more than a thousand years.
Blindspots and limits
The same gunpowder that made fireworks possible also made new forms of warfare possible, and the two histories are inseparable. The bamboo-burning tradition that preceded fireworks, and the broader alchemy culture that produced gunpowder, drew on knowledge systems from multiple Chinese traditions — Taoist, medical, and military — whose contributions don’t always appear in the headline version of the story. Early texts on fireworks chemistry also relied heavily on ingredients and trade routes connected to wider Asian and Central Asian networks, a dimension that mainstream accounts of “Chinese invention” sometimes flatten.
The exact date of the first firework will never be known. What the historical record shows is a centuries-long accumulation of knowledge — not a single invention, but a tradition building on itself, refined by generations of unnamed craftspeople whose expertise passed down through practice rather than written record.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Fireworks
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the Middle Ages
About this article
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