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Home > Health and Fitness > Supplements > Perfume In Ancient Greece
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Perfume In Ancient Greece
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Perfume has been a desired commodity since ancient times and many of the techniques used are still used to some degree today. When
looking at ancient attitudes towards perfume it is surprising to
discover how much it actually reflects the expectations of it in the
modern day. To understand the nature of it in Ancient Greece,
historians rely upon written sources, excavated mosaics and other
pictorial representations and artifacts such as perfume bottles. From
these items, lots can be determined about the function, importance and
production of it in ancient Greece.
The art of perfume making
began in the island such as Crete and other Greek colonies. It was
brought to the agora or marketplace and sold from stalls. The ancient
Greeks quickly began to experiment with them, and created their own
extraction techniques which incorporated boiling herbs and flower
petals. These methods isolated the required plant ingredients and then
perfumes were made by infusing the extracted scents in oils. The
process was a simple version of modern techniques but could create as
wide a variety of them as can be enjoyed today.
The ingredients
were mainly homegrown flowers such as iris and marjoram, roses, lilies,
and violets. Herbs and spices such as sage and cumin were also used.
Incense and myrrh were seen as decadent and were perfume ingredients
reserved for gods until the 4th century when there was a shift in
tastes, ideology and availability. Like other ancient civilization, the
ancient Greeks imported oriental essences to create more exotic
perfumes. However, unlike other civilizations, they kept them mainly
for their own use, rather than for export.
Perfume was central
to ancient Greek life. It was so popular that the politician Solon
temporarily banned the use of it to prevent an economic crisis. It was
at the centre of hospitality, wealth, status, daily life and even
philosophy. It was seen as erotic, mystical and spiritual. It was
linked to beauty which was inextricably linked with divinity. The
origins of perfume and perfumery are interwoven with Greek mythology.
In Homeric tradition, the Olympian gods taught perfumery to people. The
colour and scent of the rose is attributed to events surrounding Venus
and Cupid.
Perfume was worn by both men and women and was
central to cult worship as it was seen as pleasing to the gods and able
to win their favour. It covered the scent of sacrifices during
ceremonies, and was used as a good omen for marriage and childbirth.
Babies were anointed with it for good health. It was also central to
death. Perfumed libations were carried at the front of the funeral
procession. Bodies were burned wrapped in perfumed shrouds which were
thought to help secure a happy afterlife. Other bodies were buried with
containers of it, again as offerings to the gods.
Perfume was
also integral to cleanliness, and used in elaborate bathing rituals by
both men and women. It was used so widespread that the philosopher
Socrates openly disliked and dismissed its usage claiming it made a
free man indistinguishable from a slave. Athletes used perfume after
exercise for medicinal purposes in the form of balms and unguent oils.
This is an early recognition of the possible therapeutic and healing
properties that are reminiscent of attitudes towards aromatherapy and
aromacology in modern times. Hospitality also required an abundance of
perfume as guest`s feet were washed and anointed on being seated. Some
wines were also perfumed according to works by Appicius, in the hope
that they had medicinal properties.
With the importance of
perfume so apparent, it is no surprise that it was stored in bottles
shaped as birds an animals, sometimes only a few inches in size. Many
are found from around the 6th century BC and are known as plastics. In
fact, the perfume bottles are spun ceramics and they commonly adopted a
shape which reflected the type of perfume to be contained.
Lekuthos
were used for liquid perfume and were slim elegant glass bottles.
Aryballes were used for oils and unguents. Alabastron perfume bottles
were highly prized, mainly amongst women and it was common for the
craftsmen to brand the bottles to mark their craftsmanship, making them
even more collectable. As you can see, there are many similarities to
modern day attitudes towards perfume.
This article is under
GNU FDL license and can be distributed without any previous
authorization from the author. However the author's name and all the
URLs (links) mentioned in the article and biography must be kept.
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