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    • Prevent lice

      • For the ancient Egyptians life was a celebration, and so, just as one would want to look one's best at any party, personal hygiene was an important cultural value. The Egyptians bathed daily, shaved their heads to prevent lice or other problems, and regularly used cosmetics, perfumes, and breath mints.
      www.worldhistory.org/article/1061/cosmetics-perfume--hygiene-in-ancient-egypt/
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  2. Feb 27, 2023 · Have you ever looked at art from ancient Egypt and wondered why the people depicted sometimes have shaved heads? This fashion trend most likely had two practical purposes.

    • Ancient Egypt

      In Egyptian tradition, once a ruler fell, so did their...

  3. Jun 13, 2022 · It is likely that prehistoric humans began shaving for hygienic reasons. Shaving didn't advance until around 3000 BC when the advent of copper tools changed everything, but ancient Egypt was the first civilization to take shaving seriously.

    • Daily Use of Cosmetics
    • Perfumes & Deodorants
    • Wigs, Toothpaste, & Breath Mints

    Cosmetics were used from the Predynastic Period in Egypt (c. 6000 - c. 3150 BCE) through Roman Egypt (30 BCE-646 CE), the entire length of ancient Egyptian civilization. Men and womenof all social classes applied cosmetics, although, clearly, the better products could only be afforded by the wealthy. These cosmetics were manufactured professionally...

    The most popular and best-known perfume was kyphi. It was made of frankincense, myrrh, mastic, pine resin, cinnamon, cardamom, saffron, juniper, mint, and other herbs and spices. The scent is described as completely elevating, and those who could afford it are reported as being envied by those who could not. Strudwick notes that "the Egyptians love...

    Before one left the house for the day, one would put on one's wig and clean one's teeth. Wigs, as noted, were worn to prevent lice, but they also were simply more comfortable in the arid climate and made personal hygiene easier. Wigs were made of human hair until the Second Intermediate Period of Egypt (c. 1782 - c. 1570 BCE) when the Hyksosintrodu...

    • Joshua J. Mark
  4. Sep 11, 2020 · Art historian Gay Robins looks at how Egyptian tomb chapels built between about 1480 and 1350 BCE depicted stratification by gender, status, and age in the form of hair. The chapels were commissioned by “high-ranking male officials” to show idealized versions of their family.

  5. Egyptian men were usually clean shaven and sported both long and short hair styles. Men wore their hair long; boys had their heads shaved except for a lock of hair above their ear. A male body from a working class cemetery in Hierakonpolis dated around 3500 B.C. had a well trimmed beard.

    • Why did Egyptian pharaohs shave?1
    • Why did Egyptian pharaohs shave?2
    • Why did Egyptian pharaohs shave?3
    • Why did Egyptian pharaohs shave?4
    • Why did Egyptian pharaohs shave?5
  6. Feb 19, 2014 · In dynastic Egypt, we know from artefactual and art-historical evidence that the elite devoted a lot of energy to maintaining their appearance, with laborious cosmetic routines, and even curled their hair. By contrast, the priestly classes were often totally clean shaven, taking a razor to their bodies as well as their heads.

  7. Wigs therefore became a way of maintaining ritual purity with a temple environment, in which the 'Egyptian priests shave their bodies all over every other day to guard against the presence of lice, or anything else equally unpleasant, while they are about their religious duties' (Herodotus II.36, trans. de Selincourt 1954, 143).

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