What's so good about
Marseille Soap?
Marseilles soaps are internationally recognised as some of the best soaps in the world, but what makes them so good?
Well, it’s all about a “trinity” – three basic elements that must come together in order to produce these world famous French Soaps. But what are they? Well, it all starts with a perfect location and climate, and then it takes master artisan craftsmen using centuries old traditional methods, to combine the rich natural organic regional produce of Provence to produce these highly valued skincare products.
But to discover more about them, we must first journey back to where it all began...
Marseille - An Ancient Mediterranean Crossroads
French Soap
Marseille, a bustling port city in the South of France has long been a crossroads of Mediterranean trade and commerce. Dominating the skyline is the Basilique Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde, a Romanesque Byzantine church which overlooks this cosmopolitan Phocaéan city first founded by the Greeks in around 600 B.C.
It’s a place of tranquil squares and stepped alleys, bustling 19th-century avenues and street markets, colourful maze like streets and at its heart - the picturesque Old Port (Vieux-Port), for centuries a hub of activity where fishmongers sell their fresh daily catch along the boat-lined quaysides, and it’s here, in France’s oldest city that French artisan craftsmen have used a traditional process for over 600 years, to manufacture a soap better known as Savon de Marseille
The Mistral, a cold, dry wind originating in the Rhône Valley which occurs mostly in winter and spring, acts like nature’s vacuum cleaner bringing crystal clear skies in its wake, and in the summer the Sirocco, a hot, sand-bearing wind from the Sahara makes this the sunniest and driest city in France.
Marseille sits on the coast of Provence, a region of south-eastern France bordering Italy and the Mediterranean sea which is well known for its diverse landscapes. To the east, and stretching as far as Cassis, are the Calanques, Southern France’s version of the Norwegian fjords - staggering limestone cliffs that spill into turquoise coves.
To the west are the Côte Bleue, the Gulf de Lion and the Camargue region, a vast plain comprising large brine lagoons or "étangs" cut off from the sea by sandbars and encircled by reed-covered marshes - famed worldwide for its wild white horses.
The heart of Provence lies in the scattered hills that bind the sea to the Southern Alps, and it’s here that we find cultivated lands rich in produce and comprising rolling vineyards, olive groves, pine forests and lavender fields.
Further north, in the warm temperate air of the Alpes-Maritimes department, sit romantic and picturesque medieval mountain villages with their outdoor terraces and steep, cobbled, winding streets like Grasse - long recognised as the world capital of perfume.
But it's only in Marseille that all of these elements come together. In the perfect climate, using centuries old traditional methods, artisan craftsmen combine alkaline ash made from sea-asparagus and marine plants of the Camargue, locally pressed olive oil, and the rich organic natural produce of Provence to produce the world famous Savon de Marseille.
And with the addition of the world famous fragrances of Grasse, local "savonneries" produce classic French soaps, exquisitely perfumed artisan skincare products, often known as French market soaps...
and that's why Marseille soaps are so good!
Marseille soaps have been produced by French artisan craft master soap makers using
traditional methods for over 600 years.
Uniting the rich organic produce of Provence with natural and ecological values, they create exquisite soaps with exceptional skin care properties.
Here you can discover their heritage and find out why they are internationally recognised
as some of the best soaps in the world.
* With the exception of soaps containing organic milk, all of our soaps are suitable for vegans.
* With the exception of soaps containing organic milk, all of our soaps are suitable for vegans.