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Thursday, July 12, 2012

Perfume History

The New Perfume. 1914 Pictures, Images and Photos

Perfume history is an interesting one that stretches all the way back to ancient Egypt and the Arab world. In perfume history, various oils and alcohol were mixed to attain the perfect scent. Frankincense and myrrh from trees were the chemicals used to concoct pleasing aromas. Perfumes also came in a variety of forms which included distilled flowers which originated from the Arab world. When Catherine de Medici resided in France, she brought over a chemist by the name of Rene le Florentin who made secret concoctions for his lady alone.

Both men and women went without perfume during the middle ages, but began to arrive on the scene in 16th century Hungary. Queen Elizabeth of Hungary had perfume commissioned and the craze began to spread around Europe. From there on, the French made an indent in perfume history and eventually perfected the art form of perfume-making. From France, perfumes spread all over Europe and to the Americas. The Industrial revolution saw the mixing of perfumes for with mass produce.

Mixing perfume requires knowledge in chemistry which had also gave way to deadly perfumes that could be absorbed through the skin. Perfume history has not always been for fashion purposes and numerous ladies had been assassinated in history by absorbing poisonous perfume through the pores in their skins. Despite that dark part of perfume history, scented oils have primarily been meant to keep a person smelling fresh throughout the day since in the past, access to clean water and bathing had been rare.

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