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talgkanalen

Talgkanalen, meaning "the tallow canal," is a historical term found in Swedish industrial history. It refers not to a single fixed waterway but to various local channels and canal-like sections in urban port areas used for the handling and transport of rendered animal fat, or talg, during the early modern period and into the 19th century.

Origin of the term: talg = tallow, kanalen = the canal; the compound reflects the function of these

Description: In several Swedish cities, small canals, ditches, and drainage channels near rendering houses, tallow warehouses,

Geographical use: The term appears in local municipal records and industrial inventories, particularly in port cities

Historical significance: The tallow trade was part of urban provisioning and maritime commerce, linking food supply

Legacy: Following industrial modernization and changes in waste management, the term largely fell out of use.

See also: Canals, Industrial archaeology, Tallow, Sweden's industrial history.

waterways
within
fat-rendering
and
distribution
processes.
and
docks
formed
a
connected
network.
They
served
to
move
liquid
fat,
manage
waste,
and
facilitate
loading
onto
ships
or
wagons.
along
the
Baltic
and
North
Seas;
there
is
no
single
nationally
designated
talgkanal.
chains,
soap
and
candle
production,
and
urban
sanitation.
The
talgkanalen
network
illustrates
early
industrial
logistics
and
the
role
of
water
transport
in
byproducts
handling.
Where
remnants
exist,
they
may
appear
as
street
names,
historical
plaques,
or
preserved
watercourses
in
cityscapes.