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Browsing by tag: perfume history

Their ingredients were actually pretty tasty

Posted by Robin on 30 October 2023 Leave a Comment

Part of the reason these long-lost embalming and burial perfumes smelled so delicious is most of their ingredients were actually pretty tasty. “Almost everything that the ancient Egyptians used in their perfume was edible,” Goldsmith says. “Perfumes in ancient Egypt were often very versatile. You could eat them, chew them, fumigate them, or wear them on your skin, hair and clothing.”

— Read more in Ancient Egyptians May Have Spiced Their Mummies: Most ingredients in embalming perfumes were good enough to eat at Atlas Obscura.

The scent of the eternity

Posted by Robin on 1 September 2023 3 Comments

Now researchers studying residues of balms used in the mummification of a noblewoman called Senetnay have not only revealed that many of their ingredients came from outside Egypt but also reproduced their perfume.

[...] Huber added that, working with a perfumer, the team had recreated the balms’ scent, which would be used in an exhibition at the Moesgaard Museum in Denmark this autumn.

The smell of the balm has been labelled “the scent of the eternity”.

— Read more in ‘Scent of eternity’: scientists recreate balms used on ancient Egyptian mummy at The Guardian. Hat tip to Helen!

A rare whiff of a bygone empire

Posted by Robin on 27 May 2023 Leave a Comment

In Roman Spain, some 2,000 years ago, people may have been perfuming themselves with the musky scent of patchouli, new research hints. The study marks the first time that the composition of a Roman perfume has been identified, offering us a rare whiff of a bygone empire.

The perfume, which has solidified after two millennia inside a carved quartz bottle, was discovered in a funerary urn found in a mausoleum in Seville, Spain. Unearthed in 2019, during an excavation in modern-day Carmona, the mystery ointment has now been chemically described, revealing the inclusion of patchouli, an essential oil common in modern perfumery but never before known in use in ancient Rome.

— Read more in Composition Of Roman Perfume Identified For First Time, And It Smelled Like Patchouli at IFLScience.

Astier de Villatte Trois Parfums Historiques: Le Dieu Bleu ~ fragrance review

Posted by Kevin on 13 April 2023 12 Comments

Coming from the depths of the Egyptian age, Le Dieu Bleu exhales its divine and mysterious perfume, as if extracted from a supernatural universe. Intended for the gods, rising up are heady scents of aromatic herbs, saps, roots, and bark, destined to induce a meditative state, with powers of the beyond…its wonderful lively, intoxicating scents of woody honeyed broom, mystical and heady myrrh, green and fresh lentisk, and fruity opoponax, carry us away to the colorful splendors of the temples and frescoes of…Ancient Egypt. — Astier de Villatte

Le Dieu Bleu (one of Astier de Villatte’s Trois Parfums Historiques; see Les Nuits and Artaban) was inspired by kyphi (which I’ve written about before on Now Smell This). Many recipes for this storied scent include: Cyperus longus (with a ginger odor), juniper berries, raisins, wine, honey, resin of the pistachio tree (mastic), Calamus odoratus, broom, rose-scented grass from Egypt, myrrh, henna and mint. To this list, Greeks added cinnamon, nard (spikenard), cardamom, sesame and saffron.

Kyphi, apart from ceremonial and personal use as incense, was ingested as a medicine and made into breath-freshening pastilles…

Read the rest of this article »

Astier de Villatte Trois Parfums Historiques: Artaban ~ fragrance review

Posted by Kevin on 12 April 2023 15 Comments

Hailed for the incredible lavishness of its formula, no less than twenty-four herbs imported at great expense from the most distant lands, this “royal perfume” was the idol of the wealthy Romans. They enthusiastically soaked themselves with it at every opportunity, as was the fashion of the time. Reinterpreted by Dominique Ropion, Artaban is a pure concentrate of the wonders of the plant universe. Delight in its fragrant scents – bitter and sweet marjoram, cardamom with a spicy fruity taste, nard with earthy, resinous and woody accords, and green and herbaceous calamus with multiple fragrant facets.  — Astier de Villatte

Artaban, one of three fragrances in Astier de Villatte’s Trois Parfums Historiques collection (the others are Les Nuits and Le Dieu Bleu), was inspired by a recipe recorded by Pliny the Elder of a lavish perfume created in Parthia (and used with gusto by ancient Romans). The perfume’s list of ingredients was long: ben nut juice and oil (extracted from the Moringa oleifera), wine, honey, costus, cinnamon, cardamom, mint, myrrh, cassia, styrax, labdanum (rockrose), balsam, aromatic reeds, fragrant rush from Syria, oenanthe (water parsley flower), henna, broom, opoponax, saffron, souchet (tiger nut), marjoram, lotos (the yellowish resin provided by a ferrule from Syria or the seed of the lotus from Egypt) and spikenard (also known as ‘nard’ or Indian lemongrass).

Ancient Romans went even further than today’s biggest buyer of perfume…

Read the rest of this article »

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