Page 18 - All About History - Issue 58-17
P. 18

HAIR & BEAUTY



                                                            Handcrafted box
                                                            Dressing tables didn’t appear until the 17th century — before then, many
                                                            ancientculturescraftedornate,portableboxestostoremake-up.This
                                                            28-centimetre-long Cosmetic Box of Cupbearer Kemini was made of
                                                            cedar, with ebony and ivory veneer and silver mounting. It also had a
                                                            drawerforstoringeightvesselsandacompartmentwitharemovablelid
                                                            for storing a mirror, a comb and other paraphernalia. Egyptian cosmetic
                                                            boxes could also be made from bone, bronze, faience or pottery.




                                                                                              Red ochre rouge
                                                            Green eyeshadow                   The Ancient Egyptians
                                                            As well as using kohl as eyeliner,  used rouge in much the
        EGYPTIAN
                                                            Ancient Egyptians would paint     same way we would
                                                            their eyelids green. This eye shadow  today, to stain their lips
                                                            wouldbemadefromcrushed            and cheeks a healthy red
                                                            malachite, a vibrantly verdant copper  colour. It was made from
                                                            ore. This was commonly mined in   powdered red ochre and
        MAKE-UPKIT
                                                            the Sinai Desert — known to the   mixed with water to form a
        EGYPT, 2686-332 BCE                                 Ancient Egyptians as Ta Mefkat,   paste. Rouge was a symbol
                                                            ‘landofturquoise’.Malachitewas
                                                                                              of high status and so it was
                                                            also used as mineral pigment in   a popular choice among
        TheAncientEgyptianswenttogreatlengths               greenpaintsdatingfromantiquity.   both men and women.
        to make themselves look good. Both men and
        womenworeeyelinerandcoatedthemselvesin
        creams to ensure their skin looked smooth. There
        areaccountsofkings andqueensbathingnot
        just every day but after every meal and covering
        themselves in fragrant perfumes. To make sure  Jar of honey
        they could keep up their beauty regimen in the
        afterlife, pharaohs filled their tombs with jars of  Honey was a crucial
                                                    ingredient in the Ancient
        make-up, jewellery and even wigs.           Egyptian beauty regime. It
          This culture of using cosmetics pervaded every
                                                    could be mixed with milk to
        level of society. Even if they couldn’t afford the
                                                    create luxurious face masks
        same products as the upper classes, commoners
                                                    or applied to the skin as
        woulddotheirbesttoimitatethesamemake-up
                                                    a moisturiser. Honey was
        trends.Fortheirpart,thewealthywouldalsouse
                                                    also useful for its medicinal
        skin-lightening creams to emphasise that they did
                                                    properties that could sooth
        notworkoutsidein thesunallday.
                                                    the skin if it became sunburnt
          However, we should think twice before
                                                    or infected. Incredibly, pots of
        dismissing the Ancient Egyptians as simply vain.
                                                    honey have been recovered
        Recent scientific research has suggested that the
                                                    from Egyptian tombs still
        smoky-eyed look worn by Egyptians may have
                                                    perfectly preserved and edible.
        had a medical benefit. Kohl eyeliner, when mixed
        with moisturefromtheeyes,wouldhave hadanti-
        bacterial properties. Heavy application might also
        have helped to reduced glare from the sun. Their
        useofcreamsandlotionswouldalsohaveacted      Personalised finish
        asarudimentarysunscreen.WhiletheAncient      The incised scene on the front
        Egyptians would not have understood how this  of the box depicts Cupbearer
        worked,wedoknowtheyattributedmagical         Kemini, a high-ranking servant
        properties to their make-up, believing it would  who was the only one allowed to
        summon protection to fend off illness.       wait on the royal table, presenting
          While cosmetics were used throughout the   a vessel of ointment to Pharaoh
        Ancient Egyptian’s reign, the best condition make-  Amenemhat IV. It’s uncertain
        upboxwehaveis3,000yearsold.Theso-called      if the box originally belonged
        Cosmetic Box of Cupbearer Kemini was found in  to Kemini or Amenemhat, but
        1910byHowardCarterinthetombofPharaoh         it was found in the tomb of
        Renseneb. A hand mirror and four stone ointment  Pharaoh Renseneb, a descendent
        jars were found nearby and presumed to have  of Amenemhat who ruled for four
        belonged to it.                              months in 1777 BCE.


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