A brazier () is a container used to burn charcoal or other solid fuel for cooking, heating or rituals. It often takes the form of a metal box or bowl with feet, but in some places it is made of terracotta. Its elevation helps circulate air, feeding oxygen to the fire. Braziers have been used since ancient times; the Nimrud brazier dates to at least 824 BC.
The king was sitting in the winter-house in the ninth month; and the brazier () was burning before him.
Roman Emperor Jovian was poisoned by the fumes from a brazier in his tent in 364, ending the line of Constantine.
In Arabic, the brazier is called kanoun.
The brazier could sit in the open in a large room; often it was incorporated into furniture. Many cultures developed their own variants of a low table, with a heat source underneath and blankets to capture the warmth: the kotatsu in Japan, the korsi in Iran, the sandali in Afghanistan, and the foot stove in northern Europe. In Spain the brasero continued to be one of the main means of heating until the early 20th century; Gerald Brenan described in his memoir South from Granada its widespread habit in the 1920s of placing dying embers of a brazier beneath a cloth-covered table to keep the legs and feet of the family warm on winter evenings.
Aromatics (lavender seeds, orange peel) were sometimes added to the embers in the brazier.
A "brazier" for burning aromatics (incense) is known as a censer or thurible.
Braziers were common on industrial Picketing, largely replaced by protest marches and rallies, and a newspaper casts strikes as more white collar as a further reason for their decline.
The Japanese translation is hibachi - principally for cooking and in cultural rituals such as the Japanese tea ceremony.
Since 1957 Dairy Queen has used the word "brazier" on their signage to indicate the particular locations that serve hot food like hot dogs and hamburgers, etc..
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