Table kerosene lamp
In a corner of the living room of the landlord’s house, at a round table with a tall antique lamp that probably once ran on oil and now uses kerosene, with a new huge crimson shade, sat Fanny Mikhailovna Savina; an eighteen-year-old girl sat opposite her.
In his series of essays titled “The Peasant and Peasant Labor, ” Gleb Ivanovich Uspensky discusses the use of kerosene lamps in rural life. He writes,
Ivan Ermolaevich is indeed a true peasant, do not worry, he would not trade a kerosene lantern for a splint, nor would he put his wife to work at a spinning wheel when there was money to purchase calico.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, kerosene lamps became increasingly popular. However, after the widespread adoption of electric lighting, they were primarily used in areas without electricity for emergencies, such as in the event of a power outage.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
Table kerosene lamp
