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Frankincense

Frankincense, or olibanum, is the aromatic resin tapped from Boswellia trees of Oman, Somalia and Ethiopia, distilled into an oil with a fresh, resinous, citrus-pine, lightly peppery profile anchoring liturgical perfumery since ancient Egypt.
Botany · Boswellia sacra, B. carterii, B. papyrifera
Origins · Oman, Yemen, Somalia, Ethiopia, India

History

Frankincense is one of the oldest aromatic materials documented in human use. Egyptian medical and religious papyri record it from around 3000 BCE, used in temple fumigation, embalming and the pharmacopoeia of Karnak. The Punt Land expedition mounted by Queen Hatshepsut around 1450 BCE returned with Boswellia trees in baskets, a scene carved into her funerary temple at Deir el-Bahari (Wikipedia: Frankincense; Britannica, accessed 26 May 2026).

The frankincense trail linked southern Arabia to the Mediterranean for over a thousand years, with caravans crossing the deserts of Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Jordan to Petra, Gaza and Alexandria. Pliny the Elder describes the trade in his Natural History, listing the Boswellia groves of the Dhofar as the most precious. The Hebrew Bible records frankincense among the temple incense of Jerusalem, and the Gospel of Matthew gives it to the Magi alongside myrrh and gold (Britannica; Perfume Society, accessed 26 May 2026).

In modern Western perfumery, frankincense remained an oriental signature material rather than a soliflore. Jacques Guerlain placed an olibanum facet in the base of Shalimar (1925), where it threads under the vanilla and balsamic amber. The pivot toward incense as a central note belongs to niche perfumery at the turn of the twenty-first century. Passage d'Enfer by Olivia Giacobetti for L'Artisan Parfumeur (1999), Avignon by Bertrand Duchaufour for Comme des Garçons (2002) and Timbuktu by Duchaufour (2004) recast frankincense from supporting actor to lead. Encens Mythique d'Orient by Thierry Wasser for Guerlain (2012) later closed the loop with a luxury-house return (Fragrantica; Now Smell This; Persolaise, accessed 26 May 2026).

Botanical and geographic origin

Frankincense is the dried oleo-gum resin tapped from several species of the genus Boswellia, in the Burseraceae family. Four species cover the bulk of perfumery supply. Boswellia sacra grows on the limestone slopes of the Dhofar region of Oman, with extension into eastern Yemen; it is the historic royal grade, described by Pliny the Elder as the most precious. Boswellia carterii, sometimes treated as a synonym of B. sacra, grows in Somalia, Somaliland and Puntland, and accounts for around sixty percent of the global commercial supply. Boswellia papyrifera, the Ethiopian frankincense, grows in Ethiopia, Eritrea and Sudan; Boswellia serrata, used in ayurvedic medicine, grows in India (Wikipedia: Frankincense; Wikipedia: Boswellia sacra; Britannica, accessed 26 May 2026).

The Boswellia tree is a small, gnarled species, rarely above five meters tall, that grows on arid rocky terrain where almost no other tree survives. It can live more than a hundred years and yields between three hundred grams and one kilogram of resin per harvest season. The Dhofar of Oman remains the reference quality, graded by translucency and tear size; the most coveted is the hojari grade, a luminous pale-green resin historically reserved for the sultan.

Four geographic origins now cover the perfumery supply:

  • Oman, for Boswellia sacra, harvested in the Dhofar region around Salalah; reference royal grade.
  • Somalia, Somaliland and Puntland, for Boswellia carterii and Boswellia frereana; dominant commercial volume.
  • Ethiopia, Eritrea and Sudan, for Boswellia papyrifera; smokier, earthier grade.
  • India, for Boswellia serrata, used in ayurvedic medicine and in some niche compositions.

Production and extraction

Frankincense is obtained by tapping the bark of the Boswellia tree. The harvester, often a local family holding generational tapping rights, makes a shallow incision with a small chisel called a mengaff. The tree exudes a milky sap that hardens in air into translucent tears, golden to pale green depending on origin. Tears are hand-collected and dried in the shade. A single tree yields three to four harvests per year, with first cuts giving the cleanest resin (Wikipedia: Frankincense; Fragrantica; Albert Vieille supplier sheet, accessed 26 May 2026).

The dominant industrial route into perfumery is steam distillation of the hardened tears. Distillation lasts four to eight hours and yields three to ten percent of essential oil by weight of dry resin, depending on species. The resulting oil is a pale to amber liquid, with a citrus-pine top, a resinous-balsamic heart and a lightly smoky drydown. Two further fractions are used in modern niche perfumery. A resinoid, obtained by solvent extraction (hexane or ethanol), is denser, darker and more fixative. A CO2 supercritical extract, developed since the 1990s, captures a broader fraction of volatile and heavier molecules, closer to the smell of the burning tear, and is favored for niche and natural perfumery (Robertet technical documentation; Perfumer & Flavorist; Wikipedia, accessed 26 May 2026).

The chemistry is dominated by monoterpenes (alpha-pinene, limonene, sabinene, alpha-thujene), which carry the fresh citrus-pine top, and by boswellic acids and triterpenes responsible for the balsamic, fixative facets. B. sacra is richer in alpha-pinene; B. papyrifera in octyl acetate, reading earthier (Steffen Arctander; Good Scents Company; Wikipedia, accessed 26 May 2026).

Wholesale prices for olibanum essential oil run roughly 80 to 250 euros per kilogram in 2026, with Omani sacra at the top, Somali carterii mid-range and Ethiopian papyrifera at the bottom. CO2 extracts run two to three times higher. Frankincense is listed in IFRA standards without specific quantitative restriction at the time of writing (IFRA Standards index; supplier catalogues, accessed 26 May 2026).

Olfactive profile

Frankincense offers one of the most layered profiles on the natural perfumer's palette. The essential oil reads as a three-act material: a fresh, citrus, turpentine-like opening that recalls pine sap and mandarin peel; a deep, resinous, balsamic heart carrying the warm body of the resin; and a lightly smoky, almost medicinal drydown with a faint aldehydic shimmer (Fragrantica; Bois de Jasmin; Now Smell This, accessed 26 May 2026).

Origin shapes the reading. B. sacra from Oman is cool, citrus-forward, almost lemony at the top. B. carterii from Somalia is warmer and more resinous, the canonical "church incense" reference. B. papyrifera from Ethiopia is earthier, smokier, more honeyed. The CO2 extract sits closest to the burning tear.

Frankincense is the resin that turned smoke into perfumery. It opens like pine in the wind, holds like a cathedral at twilight, and closes on the warm hand of the priest who closed the censer.

Key characteristics

Main active compounds
Alpha-pinene, limonene, sabinene, alpha-thujene, myrcene (monoterpenes, fresh citrus-pine top); octyl acetate (B. papyrifera, fatty earthy facet); incensole, incensyl acetate, boswellic acids (resinous balsamic heart) (Wikipedia: Frankincense; Good Scents Company).
Pyramid position
Top to base. Volatile monoterpenes lift the opening; resinoid and CO2 fractions anchor the drydown. Persistence of 8 to 14 hours on skin, much longer on textile.
Adjacent families
Resinous-balsamic, oriental ambery (frankincense plus amber accord), woody-aromatic (frankincense plus cedar or cypress), aldehydic-incense (modern niche register).
Usual concentration
Typically 1 to 8 percent of the formula, with niche incense compositions sometimes pushing to 15 percent. Often paired with myrrh, labdanum, cedar, elemi and aldehydes.

Notable perfumes featuring frankincense

Six compositions return regularly in the specialised English-language press as benchmarks for frankincense. The selection spans 1999 to 2012, from the airy minimalist reading to the cathedral statement, the Saharan composition, the Italian woody-incense register and the luxury-house return.

YearHousePerfumeRole of frankincense
1999L'Artisan ParfumeurPassage d'EnferOlivia Giacobetti. Airy, transparent frankincense paired with lily and white musk; minimalist niche reference of the 1990s.
2002Comme des GarconsAvignonBertrand Duchaufour. Canonical Catholic-cathedral incense built around B. carterii, myrrh and chamomile; cult niche reference of the 2000s.
2004L'Artisan ParfumeurTimbuktuBertrand Duchaufour. Frankincense at the heart of a Saharan composition with karo karounde, mango and vetiver.
2004Armani PriveBois d'EncensItalian woody-incense reading; the elegant ready-to-wear interpretation of frankincense paired with cedar and pine.
2008James HeeleyCardinalJames Heeley. Modern niche statement on the Catholic-incense register, frankincense supported by elemi and myrrh.
2012GuerlainEncens Mythique d'OrientThierry Wasser. Luxury-house return on frankincense, paired with saffron, rose and amber; Aqua Allegoria limited series.

Two further niche references: Olibanum by Profumum Roma, a single-note resin soliflore, and Eau Duelle by Diptyque (2014, Fabrice Pellegrin), a fresher reading that pairs frankincense with vanilla and pink pepper.

Frequently asked questions

What does frankincense smell like in perfumery?01
Fresh, citrus, pine and resinous at the top, deep, balsamic and warm at the heart, lightly smoky and medicinal at the drydown. Omani B. sacra is citrus-forward; Somali B. carterii warmer and more resinous; Ethiopian B. papyrifera earthier and smokier.
Where does frankincense in perfumery come from?02
Four origins. Oman (Dhofar, royal grade) and Yemen, for B. sacra. Somalia, for B. carterii, dominant volume. Ethiopia and Sudan, for B. papyrifera. India, for B. serrata, mainly ayurvedic.
How is frankincense extracted?03
The bark is incised with a small chisel called a mengaff. The sap hardens into translucent tears that are hand-collected, then steam-distilled four to eight hours to yield the oil, or solvent-extracted into a denser resinoid. Niche perfumery also uses CO2 supercritical extraction for a faithful read of the balsamic facets.
Why is frankincense called both incense and olibanum?04
Olibanum comes from the Arabic lubân, the historic caravan trade term. Incense comes from the Latin incensum, "that which is burned". In aromachemistry the technical term is olibanum oil; in everyday English it is frankincense. The material is the same.
Is frankincense IFRA-restricted?05
Olibanum oils, resinoids and CO2 extracts are listed in IFRA standards without specific quantitative restriction at the time of writing. The formulator complies with the latest IFRA standard and EU CLP labelling on sensitising components (limonene, linalool).

Sources

Published 26 May 2026 · Updated 26 May 2026 · Last factual review: 26 May 2026 · Author: Osmetheca