Sunday, 17 July 2016

Keep Watching This Space!





So...there has been some major lag with this blog. We haven't met each other in almost two years now.

And before I plunge into excuses (which I eventually will), an unadulterated apology is due to all of you.
I am very sorry.
I really am.
From the depths of my heart.

Now, the excuses reasons for this rather long long-time-no-see period.

I moved residence from Ohio to Pennsylvania. During the relocation I lost most of my precious research notes on the subject I was writing about...(yes, I still write notes in a notebook...a real paper notebook...with a pen. What can I say, I am old fashioned like that!)

Then, I was in India for a period of four months...the visit was long overdue and we had a big wedding in the family yada yada yada.

I was and am involved in other writing projects...but really, that is no excuse to not write this blog. I understand.

On a more solemn note I also had a few personal health concerns which needed immediate attention.
I do not wish to bore you with the details but I am on the path to recovery now, getting better each day. :)

I have finally re-researched the topic to my heart's content and I have my notes in order again. I cannot dish out articles for you to spend your precious time on, unless I am first 100 percent satisfied and pleased with the quality and authenticity of the material.

We shall pick up from where we left very very soon. I will take you with me into the boudoirs and dressing chambers of ancient Greece and Rome.

My heartfelt thanks to all those of you who have repeatedly complained about the delay...to me personally, on my social media and even to some of my family members. It is your enthusiasm and support that keeps my motivation up. I was overwhelmed each time I read or heard about those complaints.
In a world of two second attention spans, I am incredibly blessed to have readers who have remembered this little blog and this unpaid blogger after two years of inactivity.

The unending encouragement I have received from my readers and those few minutes you spend on clicking on the links to my articles and reading them...that is my only remuneration.

Thank you!

See you real soon!


-
Pallavi



Friday, 29 August 2014

IT'S A BEAUTIFUL WORLD: DHARA (Mohenjo-Daro), ERISH (Mesopotamia),FENG-LEI (China) 3000 BC to 1400 BC



Our next stop on this journey is what can be roughly called the Bronze Age. What a great era this was! Man had finally established his superiority over all other creatures and defeated all the unfavourable natural conditions to pave way for the complex social networks called CIVILIZATION.

We had conquered rivers, oceans, land and the power of flowing winds. We could grow our own grains and vegetation, domesticated animals for milk, eggs, meat, wool, leather, for working with us in our fields and for travelling. Plants and animals had been selectively bred to give more yield and be more docile and useful around human establishments.
Instrumentation, too, was at a completely new high. From tinkering with simple pieces of stone, bone and wooden tools for activities of daily life and agriculture,  man had gone on to conquer the one material that would impact the rest of the human race for ever - the beautiful, strong, gleaming, solid, malleable, ductile and durable Metal! Metal that made our lives easier and also gave us the power to fight and kill  more swiftly than ever. (that discussion, however, we shall keep for another time)
With the domestication of plants and animals, the assurance of a steady influx of food, and the power of metal to defend him, man gave in to his social nature and started settling down in large communities. And these communities became more permanent from the semi-permanent establishments of the past. Floods and earthquakes, while still very frightening and destructive, could be controlled to some extent and hence, unlike previous eras, couldn't wipe out entire communities altogether. It was the banks of the major rivers that saw the first permanent human settlements - the Indus river in the Indian sub-continent, the Tigris-Euphrates river system in Mesopotamia, the Huang-He in China and the mighty Nile in Egypt. (Because river water was of utmost importance to agriculture and rivers formed interconnected networks for transportation to almost anywhere)

This was the first time in human history that we were able to devote time exclusively to arts, science, culture and religion - because our basic necessities - food, shelter and protection from the forces of Nature - had been taken care of.
For appeasing our newly named deities (who were the personifications of the fearsome Natural forces that we were yet to comprehend completely) we elected priests, for looking after day to day civil life, laying down rules and defending us, we elected kings and leaders, for procuring produce from the producers and bringing it to our establishments some of us became merchants, while another group of people took it upon themselves to look after the cleanliness and hygiene of our homes and communities.
Such precise delegations of role in the nascent human society, gave others the time to indulge in finer pursuits like art, architecture, music, dance, elaborate rituals of beautification, writing, composing, handicrafts, pottery and so on.

With such enormous changes in the human "way-of-life" from the Neolithic times to the middle and late Bronze Age, it is but obvious that the purposes, definitions and means of beauty had undergone transformation. While beauty will always be associated with attracting potential mates, the Bronze Age saw women working in fields, markets, pottery-barns, as weavers and seamstresses, in the service of kings, as jewellery makers, nurses, singers, dancers and courtesans. Women could now marry without violent abductions or fights breaking out to possess them, own property and servants, work and even separate from their husbands after justifying the merit of their case.
Therefore, being beautiful now meant a lot of other things than just latching on to a man for food and protection. Hygiene, aesthetics, orderliness, a feeling of well-being and energy was a major part of what defined beauty in the bronze age.

To take a closer look at the beauty rituals of the Bronze Age river-based civilizations, we will first visit Dhara, named after the flow of life-giving water, a young girl living on the banks of Indus, then stop in the neighbouring Mesopotamia to meet Erish and finally, conclude this trip with a visit to Feng-Lei, who lives in China, where the Huang-He flows.

DISCLAIMER: PLEASE DO NOT USE THE BEAUTY RECIPES MENTIONED IN THIS POST. WHILE THEY ARE AUTHENTIC, THE INGREDIENTS MAY NOT BE UNADULTERATED IN THIS DAY AND AGE. ALSO, THESE PREPARATIONS MAY BE ACTUALLY HARMFUL. 

BEST TO LET BYGONES BE BYGONES. :)

DHARA'S FRAGRANT SANDALWOOD - The Indus Valley - 2600 BC


Dhara has always considered herself lucky to be born to a merchant father.They are not poor. Their family owns land to cultivate cotton,ox, bulls and cows, employs people in fields and shops and lives in a big, well-lit, airy two story baked-brick house with many rooms circling a central courtyard and its own drainage system and water supply.
Her father is a big trader. His men often hire wooden ships to travel to far off lands. She is aware that their community trades with other such communities in Southern India, Gandhar (Afghanistan), Egypt and Mesopotamia. Her father's men sail to these places, making use of the ample river networks and exchange cotton, linen, beautiful painted pottery, timber, beads, sandalwood  for gold, spices, perfumes, jade and other semi-precious stones. Some of her father's men have stayed back in Mesopotamia to act as her father's agent while some foreign traders have made her town their home.


Artist's representation of a gateway in an Indus Valley township. www.crystallinks.com


Dhara knows she'll probably never get to see these exotic places herself, but at least she can spend her time working as a helper in the big shops her father has in the central marketplace. It helps if a family member is present as a supervisor. The people who come to buy their wares give them other useful things in return.
That's how it works out in Dhara's community - a person has to give something of importance to another person he is interested in procuring something from. Dhara's father uses precise weight measurements to ensure he is not getting fooled. The weights are made from cubes of flinty rock called Grey Chert.

While her younger brothers play with clay and wooden toys in the form of animals, carts on a string and dolls, Dhara, an adolescent, loves the pieces of jewellery, pots of perfume and fine cotton skirts her father and mother often gift her. Her mother is a stylish and beautiful woman, people say. And Dhara is following very rapidly in her footsteps.
It is very warm almost all year round in her town. Heavy clothing is not suitable for Dhara and her people.
She wears loose cotton tunics, chest bands tied around the chest and fine cotton skirts tied at the waist by a gold or bronze girdle, armlets, bracelets and bangles and adorns her neck with necklaces made from ivory, semi-precious stones, beads, gold and bronze. Her mother, being the chief wife of an important town-merchant, wears an elaborate crown like head-dress or sometimes a cloth turban. 

Gold and Semi-Precious stone Jewellery unearthed at different sites in the Indus Valley. www.bbc.co.uk

Woman with curvy figure, prominent bust. Wearing choker, necklace, girdle and elaborate headdress. www.harappa.com


Their community worships the "Mother Goddess", the deity of fertility and the Earth's unending bounty. And following the cult of the "Mother Goddess" or "Earth Mother", the most sought after feminine figure is the voluptuous, well rounded one. Big bosom, rounded belly, slim and shapely waist,wide hips and wide thighs.

All the women in Dhara's family use sandal wood very heavily - as a perfume, as a powder, as a face and body mask and as an emollient. The strong, soothing, earthy, woody notes of sandalwood scent the air of her home.

Women also stain their fingertips and the soles of their feet with the coppery red lac-dye. It is considered to be a sign of beauty and is very auspicious.

In the heat and humidity of Mohenjo-Daro, bathing is an important and elaborate ritual of hygiene. Some privileged families like Dhara's have their own private bathing area in their residence. But for the majority of the people there are great public tanks and baths. Both cold and warm baths are common.

People exfoliate their bodies vigorously with scrapers/exfoliators like a rough piece of cloth, a block of wood, jawbone of ox, a chunk of sandstone and so on. It is believed to help with keeping the skin clean and fresh.

Use of oils for body and hair is common. Oil massages are believed to tone and strengthen the muscles and improve circulation and give a lush growth of hair on the head. Mustard and sesame oil are used most often.
(Crushed and powdered seeds of the Opium Poppy/khus-khus mixed in milk, get rid of dandruff when applied on the scalp)

Masks or "Lepas" are used both on face and body. They are supposed to detoxify, make the complexion bright and fight blemishes and aging.
(Sandalwood paste mixed with milk cream, saffron, honey and turmeric is Dhara's favourite facial mask. Some women also use soaked lentils ground with few drops of honey.)

Any kind of body hair (arms, face, legs, pubes) is considered repulsive, especially in women. They are shaved with the help of fine razors or removed with the help of depilatory preparations.
(Women in Dhara's family pound together the dried fruits of Amla/Indian Gooseberry and Indian Long Pepper and soak the resulting mixture in the milky secretion of the Holy Milk Hedge plant. This paste applied over the desired part of the body makes the hair from that area fall off)

After a prolonged bath, people dust themselves generously with perfumed, deodorizing bath powders. It keeps them fresh, active, energetic and smelling good for a long time.
(Powdered barks of the Mango tree and Pomegranate tree, mixed with powdered dry Neem leaves, finely milled powdered sea shells and powdered sandalwood removes body odour and keeps Dhara feeling fresh and fragrant all day)

Depending on the season, oils, saffron, musk (for winter) and camphor, sandalwood, vetiver (for summer) are used.

Both men and women apply lamp-soot and Antimony based collyrium to line their eyes and the green earth pigment "terre verte" as eye-colour. Women chew betel leaves with camphor, catechu and cardamom to sweeten their breath and stain their lips red.
Mixing a pounded, ground mixture of Camphor, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg and cloves in water and gargling with it or swirling it around the mouth removes bad breath.

The famous nude Harappan Dancing Girl artefact. The bangles reach up to the upper arm.A trend still followed by women in Rajasthan, India.  www.bbc.co.uk
Dhara apes all the beauty regimes she sees her mother following diligently, so she too may grow up to be a fine, confident, radiant lady like her mother, marry well and hold her own in front of staff and servants.
Beauty gives her the confidence to face the world.

Dhara has no idea at this point, that one day, her entire civilization will be wiped out due to unknown, puzzling causes, their script will be deemed unreadable and no one will ever know where her people went! But for the time being, it is a rich, thriving, peaceful, bountiful civilization.



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ERISH'S POT OF KOHL - Ur, Sumer/Mesopotamia - 1772 B.C


Erish was named very ambitiously. In the ancient Sumerian language, Erish means “Exalted Lady” or “Queen”. But she herself is no such thing. Though living in very close quarters with exalted ladies and gents, Erish is a concubine of a rich man whose wife is incapacitated by disease.
She came into this household of traders and business owners as a part of her mistress’s dowry. Being good looking, intelligent and literate, she was then considered by her mistress’s father, a very good and useful companion for the lady in her new marital home. Erish knew from the very beginning that she was more deserving of luxury, opulence, romantic love and a fulfilling family life than her soft-minded, physically weak young mistress, but bound by the ties of duty and loyalty, she had always lived in the shadows - never really reaching out for what her heart desired. So near, yet so far. She’d never be mistress...always a servant.

Their community in Ur (an important Sumerian trade city in Mesopotamia) was not suited for really intelligent women. While they could own property, work, sue, run businesses, they were never the legal and political equals of men. No woman was a lawmaker. Yes, there were high-priestesses, but rumour was that they were little more than religious prostitutes. The difference between queens and royal concubines was hardly noticeable. Of course, there were a plethora of Goddesses to pray to, but mostly representing feminine ideals like love, romance, fertility and agriculture.

It was a hurtling fall from a long staircase followed by a prolonged fever that changed Erish’s fortune. Her mistress was severely injured and had taken the bed permanently. 
According to the Code of Hammurabi, her husband couldn’t divorce her or get rid of her on the basis of illness. He was dutybound to care and provide for her throughout her life. But that in no way meant he couldn’t enjoy the services of the female slaves and companions his wife had brought as a part of her dowry. Her mistress offered Erish as a sexual companion to her husband. She taught Erish her rituals of beautification, gave her fine clothes and jewellery, and tiny shell-shaped containers of gold and terracotta filled with coloured cosmetics. 
That day Erish’s life changed.

Erish takes detailed baths in scented water. Someday the water is perfumed with the essence of roses, on other days Oil of Orange Blossoms, or Oil of Frankincense.

She rubs her skin regularly with Pumice stone to keep it smooth and free of body hair. She pushes down the cuticles of her nails with a blunt metal stick and plucks her eyebrows with metal tweezers to keep them well-arched.

She wears a toga-like strapless maxi dress, secured by an ivory pin and a lot of bead strings around her neck. The beads her mistress wears are gold, lapis lazuli and ivory.

Erish, and all the men and women she sees around her, use a lot of kohl on their eyes. It is made out of charred tree resins, powdered antimony (stibium), powdered lead compounds and arsenic. Heavily lined eyes and dark painted eyebrows are the most sensuous feature in a woman. Erish knows that an attractive woman should speak not with her mouth, but with her eyes.

She also paints her eyelids with vivid colours like apple red, rich green, aqua blue and turquoise. Her eyebrows are painted thick, dark and arched with kohl and they meet ever so slightly at centre of her forehead.


Ivory sculpture showing face of woman with gold head band, heavily kohl-lined eyes, painted eyebrows and elaborately curled hairstyle. avalonianaeon.blogspot.com

Her hair is well oiled and piled on her head in a huge chignon. The men, like her master, generally curl their hair and beards elaborately with curling tongs. Her mistress, before the fall, used to wear an elaborate arrangement of gold on her head. The gold was beaten into multiple ribbons, beads, floral headpieces and was a glorious sight! But Erish is only a concubine. So she wears little gold and ivory beads in her hair.
The flattened skull of a rich woman, Queen Puabi, unearthed at Ur, Mesopotamia. theancientworld.tumblr.com


Queen Puabi's gold headdress and bead cape reconstructed from the flattened skull unearthed in Ur. ornamentedbeing.tumblr.com 

Erish applies face creams and a variety of face powders from her mistress’s cosmetic box. Her face powders are made of red oxide of iron (haematite), white lead and yellow ochre. Yellow ochre dissolved in a few drops of water and applied on her face forms a beautiful foundation for loose powders and cheek rouge.


Facial reconstruction of a wealthy Mesopotamian lady. Arguably Queen Puabi.

She reddens her lips with red ochre based lip salves or with deep red Henna.
Henna designs also adorn her hand and feet. The men dye their hair, beard and eyebrows with Henna.

For special nights spent with her master, Erish relies on the heavy usage of perfumes. These perfumes are sourced from crocus, thyme, lotus, marjoram, saffron, cinnamon, frankincense, myrrh and amber.


Erish takes care of every single detail of all the tedious beauty rituals with just one goal in mind. In Ur, Sumer, a master retains the right to sell a servant even if he has had sexual relations with her and even if she has borne him sons.


Erish is, therefore, aiming to capture her master’s heart – to avoid being sold to another unknown family. Her intelligence and tact are gifts of Nature......and now cosmetics have given her the conviction of attractiveness and the aura of confidence. 

Well, why not?

                          ***********************************

Feng-lei's Nail Paint - Anyang, China, 1500 BC


"Red, White and Black" are what Feng-Lei has been told the three colours of feminine beauty. Red lips and nails, white skin and black hair, eyebrows and teeth (yes! you read it right...black teeth)


White porcelain skin and pitch black hair in ancient Chinese women. ancientpeoples.tumblr.com

Feng-Lei lives in the city of Anyang with her parents and siblings. They are neither very rich, nor very poor. Her father married two other women after he married her mother because her mother couldn't give birth to sons. Sons are highly coveted in her community. 
It is only after marriage, in the eventuality of having a son, can a girl hope to command some respect. Or if she lives to a great old age, survives her husbands and sons and becomes a grand matriarch. Otherwise, women should simply be content with household work, having children (sons), looking after the family and beautifying themselves.

Feng-Lei's mother is concerned about the fate of her only daughter. She wasn't a particularly attractive woman herself and she has had enough trouble as such. She has never had much affection from her husband. Though the head-wife, she has eroded her softness working hard at household chores. Her husband doesn't like it if the younger, prettier wives work much. But she doesn't mind. She keeps her mind occupied in grueling hard work and makes sure Feng-Lei can stay happy and beautiful. 
Feng-Lei has no blood-brothers to look out for her, neither is she the favourite child of her father, and therefore, her only chance of happiness in the future is being selected by a good suitor. And suitors are known to be notoriously choosy. A slightly sallow complexion, plain fingernails, shadow of eyebrow hair - almost anything can get Feng-Lei a rejection when the groom and his family come to see her. So, being prepared is the best option.

Feng-Lei washes her hands well, massages her long, graceful fingers with oil and once the oil has been absorbed, she paints her nails a beautiful pale pink.

(Nail colours, first formulated in Bronze Age China, are a concoction of gelatin, gum arabic, beeswax and eggs, mixed with natural pigments. The royalty can use gold or silver dust in their nail paint, wear deep, vibrant colours like red, black, purple....but the common people are forbidden from colouring their nails brightly.)

Her mother helps Feng-Lei in following the latest trend among the city girls by threading off the eyebrows entirely.


Feng-Lei paints black, thin, shapely eyebrows over her eyes, in the place where her natural eyebrows should have been. 


The ultimate beauty statement is a porcelain white skin and black (or golden, if one is rich) stained teeth.


Feng-Lei uses generous amounts of finely milled and ground raw rice as a face powder. She paints her lips red.


Teeth-Blackening or "Ohaguro" is considered a sign of great beauty. Also, a coat of black colour over the teeth was thought to protect the enamel and prevent tooth decay. Feng-Lei colours her teeth black.


(The formulation for blackening teeth was prepared by  dissolving iron filings in vinegar and combining the resulting solution with vegetable tannins from sources such as black tea. This mixture was black and insoluble in water. It had to be applied on the teeth once a day or once a week, depending on the intensity desired.)


Woman with black teeth.

Another important aspect of aesthetics Feng-Lei must learn about is the art of fragrances. Her people have just one word to denote fragrance, incense and perfume 
"Heang" and Heang is divided into six moods-
Tranquil, Reclusive, Beautiful, Luxurious, Refined and Noble. FengLei has to learn to use the right aromatic for the right occasion. 

Feng-Lei's world and surroundings are by far the most different from her Bronze Age counterparts in the Indus Valley and Mesopotamia. She is more or less cut off from the rest of the world in faraway China. 
She often wonders if there is a world beyond the Huang-He river. If it is inhabited by people like her. If there are more girls, more women out there.
How must their life be?

Feng-Lei is grandly ignorant of the fact that this very year, 1500 BC, as she prepares to find a suitor and live out her life in the quest for the coveted "male child", far from her homeland, a woman has been made a King - not a Queen...but a King...a role no woman has dared to take on before...Pharaoh Hatsheput of Egypt.

Feng-Lei will never know.

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References:

Fashions in Makeup: From ancient to modern times by Richard Corson
Wikipedia
www.harappa.com
www.bbc.co.uk/schools/primaryhistory/
Herbal Cosmetics in Ancient India by Kunda B. Patkar
Beginnings of Civilization, www.saylor.org/courses/history101/
Daily life in ancient Mesopotamia by Karen Rhea Nemet-Nejat
lauravaleri.com/2013/05/23/the-role-of-women-in-ancient-sumer
www.cosmeticsinfo.org/Ancient-history-cosmetics
http://www.diybeautytutorials.com/2012/09/7-ancient-chinese-beauty-secrets
History of cosmetics, SK Chaudhri and NK Jain, Asian Journal of Pharmaceutics, 2009

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P.S - Thank you for taking time out from your busy schedule and reading my blog.
 If you are enjoying reading these articles, may I request you to please follow this blog by signing into Blogger with your Google ID and share the link to any article that you like the most here - on Facebook, Twitter, Google plus and any other social media you may be using...so your friends can visit too? :)
I am a new author and I would be grateful for any kind of encouragement from my readers. It is a tough world out there for new authors!Thanks once again! Hope you love reading my articles as much as I loved writing them! 

Pallavi
Kent, OH

Friday, 22 August 2014

IT'S A BEAUTIFUL WORLD: AYLA'S RED OCHRE (10,000 BC, Egypt)


10,000 BC, New Stone Age*, Somewhere along The Nile Valley, Egypt

*(Neolithic era - Egyptians are still a Negroid, "true African" population. Man has turned farmer from hunter/gatherer, has settled down in establishments and communities and owns land and residence.Cleopatra and the Europoean featured "Egyptians" are, as yet, millenia away.)


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Who first applied cosmetics on their face and when exactly and where, is a question forever lost in the annals of time. There are no indisputable, solid written records of the earliest, oldest and the most primitive manifestation of the pursuit of physical beauty. Perhaps politics, violence, wars and battles have always found importance over the more subtle, more delicate and more beautiful aspects of our growth as a society.

Therefore, we will have to rely solely on archaeological finds and faded wall paintings, and re-create the “face of beauty” in the Neolithic Era from our imagination. Some information, to serve as the basis of this “flight of fancy” we are about to indulge in, is, however, out there and has been, thankfully, found! 

For example, archaeologists have unearthed palettes (made of ivory, slate, stone etc) used to grind pigments for eye-paints in sites dating back to 10,000 BC and thereabouts*
Perfume bottles, eye-paints, emollients have been discovered in ancient graves, rendering the dead person equipped with cosmetics for after-life. 

When we consider these primitive samples of make-up, paired with cave-art, the early clusters of semi-permanent dwellings, the beginning of systematized agriculture and domestication of animals, we start to see the creation of an ancient framework for cultured, societal living, rich with symbolism, rituals and practices. 
This is the first time in human evolution that man and woman, have started living in large social groups and forming relationships to take the human race ahead, relationships based on cooperation and mutual dependence for resources like food, shelter, protection for the female and her children, and the privilege of sex and dispersing his genes as much as possible for males. And the interaction of males and females, for the purpose of reproduction is driven by two major stimuli - female fertility and beauty. 

And in a 10,000 BC time frame and perspective, it won't be wrong to say, fertility IS beauty. 

Lumps of red ochre and other pigments, believed to be the primitive form of lipstick, cheek rouge and eye-shadow and body paint , have been found in Middle and New Stone Age settlements and burial sites. And a look at the body-painting and mate-selecting rituals of the indigenous tribes existing today, tells us that, manipulation of the body using man-made products is not only for the frivolous purpose of beautification,but it is an important signal to the opposite sex...MAKE-UP IS A MEANS OF COMMUNICATION.

But how do we start our journey? And wherefrom? Is there a direction? Which way do the recent finds of historians take us? 
Well, I personally believe that these old, primitive archaeological pointers lead us to the banks of the mighty Nile, the cradle of human civilization, in the bountiful Africa, where we meet the young Ayla and her community.

AYLA's RED OCHRE 

It all began when the women set out to fool the men!! 


Ayla has just had her initiation rite. The rite of passage from girl child to woman. It is a puberty ritual she has observed among the women of her community since she was a little girl. She has seen her sisters, her friends go through it. And to be honest, she was kind of waiting to transform from a child to a young woman, marked by her first menstruation. She has been of little value to her community as a girl child. A woman, however, is a different story. 

A young girl with big eyes and a complexion the colour of the silky dark Nile clay, Ayla has noticed her own body change from lithe, athletic and rough from playing in the mud and sand all day, to elongated, rounded, curvy and graceful. Her mother has told her over and over again that she will not attract a single mate if she went about looking like a young boy. She knows now, with her initiation into the group of "young women" she will have to give up playing in the sun. But still Ayla has enjoyed this process of growing up. It is as if she is in on some beautiful, intriguing secret! 

There has been much singing and dancing at her initiation ceremony. It was an all woman affair. Ayla was bathed, smeared in perfumed oils, tattooed with the mark of their tribe, her hair has been elaborately braided and her face, lips and arms and legs have been painted with Red Ochre. (Red Ochre is an earth pigment found in clay that has large contents of iron in the form of Hematite
From looking at most of the women around her, Ayla can say from now on, Red Ochre will play a very important role in her beauty regime. 


The Nile Valley has become pretty dense with people as compared to what it was even fifty generations ago - so dense that simply hunting and gathering food is not enough anymore.            


(Picture courtesy: www.historyforkids.org/learn/egypt)
           

Ayla’s father is the head of their mid-sized community that consists of mostly peasants. Her family owns some land, quite a few cows and pigs and a very airy and sunny semi-permanent dwelling constructed with mud. Her father is the leader not because he owns the largest piece of land, but because he is believed to be the strongest of all the men around and therefore capable of protecting the community in the eventuality of an attack.


Ayla is not sure if she will live out her entire life here. The river Nile has a mischievous tendency of flooding. Her father says it is this flood that makes the soil richer every time it sweeps the land, but Ayla knows the women live in the fear of having to move if their settlement is flooded. Everything is always more difficult for women than for men. Women cannot fight or hunt or do really heavy chores in the fields, so they stay back having children, taking care of their men and brood, and chaffing and grinding grains and charring meat over fire. A mass movement from this settlement will not only mean extra hard work for the women-folk of the community, but also fear of violence, abduction and violation from members of other hostile communities and tribes.


       (Picture courtesy: www.history.com)

In such volatile conditions, Ayla understands that as a woman her safety lies in securing a mate as fast as possible and reproducing. However, there is a slight glitch in the plan. 

The mature women in Ayla's community are divided into three categories - the ones that are old and cannot reproduce, the ones that are pregnant or lactating and therefore cannot be of much interest to the menfolk for some time and the ones, like Ayla herself, that are young, attractive and not pregnant and therefore ready to be "taken"....ready to lure the dominant males away from the women they have already impregnated.

This, the women will not allow. Ayla's Red Ochre is not her's alone.

Menstruation and fertility are a big deal in Ayla's time and community. Reproductive stress is high on the women as they are dependent on men for food, shelter and protection. 
And therefore, Ayla learns, the women work as a strong coalition...a community within a community...they help each other by manipulating the men's mating behaviour - with the help of the colour "red".

Ayla's older sisters explain it to her. In an emerging social structure where the rules of monogamy have not yet been laid down, the reproductive investment of women is far greater than that of men. Physically, it is the women who have to bear the brunt of keeping the community thriving, whereas, for men the best way is to mate with as many fertile women as is possible and then to not stick around for the entire duration of bringing up the children. The men go on in the search for more women who are fertile and not pregnant. 

To stop this philandering of their mates, who provide them food and shelter, the pregnant and lactating women in Ayla's community fake their fertility. 

This is called "Sham Menstruation". The women dress up and make-up in the same way a young, fertile, non-pregnant girl would. Earlier they used to wear a lot of red flowers. But as red flowers are unreliable in the dry heat of Egypt, they use Red-Ochre to paint their lips, cheeks and bodies to give out the signal that they are "fertile and therefore desirable." 

And then, since they live in a community with a strong and protective women's coalition, they deprive their men of sex....every woman together at the same time. The women go on a sort of "Sex-Strike". And no woman breaks the rules of this "fertility sisterhood". 

This confuses the men to no end. While the way the entire womenfolk dress up and put red paint on themselves, screams "yes"; the way they ignore the men and behave, yells "no".

Biology yells "YES!", while behaviour yells "NO!".

The signal one gender sends out loud and clear to another gender is that they are fertile and capable of having babies, but they are temporarily unavailable. 
The men therefore, busy themselves with working on fields, growing grains, hunting the odd animal for meat and bringing home food.

Ayla is intrigued to no end, but is willing to participate in this elaborate charade. She is readily willing to share her Red-ochre with other women to smear on themselves and fake menstruation, so that no woman of the community is deserted and their supply of food and shelter continue unhindered.

(At this point in time these women are not even aware that thousands of years later, the colour "red" will still be the colour of sexual attraction, intrigue and fertility...that men will still be mysteriously drawn to a woman's red stained lips, red rouged cheeks, red clothes and red heels...Red, will forever be the colour of finding a mate and keeping him!)

***********************

Ayla is learning about so many new things she always knew the grown women never told the children.

Red Ochre clay mixed with water is a beautiful colour to paint the body and face with. It is the most commonly used cosmetic Ayla sees around her. Almost everyone is painting their lips, eyes, cheeks and bodies with Red Ochre.

Myrrh, Thyme and Chamomile, tied in a soft cloth bundle, smell so good and fresh and spicy that Ayla sometimes goes to sleep with such little bundles on her person.

Ayla’s personal favourite is Lavender. It makes her smell beautiful and mysterious. It calms her down.

Nine parts animal fats mixed with one part perfumed resin is an excellent and long lasting skin emollient.

Burning natural resins gives off a very beautiful fragrance.

Myrrh oil is used to protect against sunburns under the harsh Egyptian Sun and is an anti-inflammatory and antiseptic, anti-microbial and an astringent. 
It is also useful against infections of feminine private parts and can also ease painful menstruation. 
Swirling water with a few drops of Myrrh oil in the mouth makes bad breath go away. It can also stop wounds from bleeding.

Rosemary, Cedar, Marjoram, Moringa, Frankincense, Rose are all used by Ayla, her mother and sisters, as perfumes, essential oils and emollients.But they are expensive. 

Olive oil and almond oil keep the skin smooth and shiny and slow the appearance of wrinkles. 
In fact some Sweet Almond Oil and two drops of essential oil of Frankincense, applied to the face in circular massaging motions is a tried and tested method of preserving youthful skin for a very long time, Ayla has been told.

Drawing the waterline and lash line of eyes thickly with kohl (a mixture of soot, ash, crushed burnt almonds and ochre, black manganese oxide, powdered antimony, malachite, verdigris, resin etc) makes the eyes stand out and look sensuous and attractive.
Painting the eyes is also supposed to protect them from the harsh sun.

Henna is good for temporary tattoos.

Hair on the head was, however, best worn in a tight braid, or many tight braids after oiling it with perfumed olive or almond oil. 

A good way to keep hair looking slick and black is to smear it with a paste of soot mixed in animal fat. The men prefer their hair to be completely shaved off. 
In the heat of Egypt, a shaved head means less sweat and no lice infestation. 

Clay from the banks of the Nile help with keeping the skin tight and cool against the rough weather and also helps in avoiding boils and pimples.


Cream churned from milk, when added to honey, is an excellent skin softener.

************.

Ayla understands that her pursuit of beauty and all the oiling, massaging, tattooing and face painting will eventually cause strife between two or more young men of her community. Someone will fight someone to death, just to possess her.
Or she will be betrothed to the chief of a larger, mightier tribe, somewhere unknown to her as yet, on the banks of Nile- in a matrimonial deal that will ensure the prosperity of her tribe.Thereafter, her only duty would be giving birth to and rearing child after child and cooking, cleaning and grinding wild grains. 

And then,  if she doesn't send out those "red-ochre painted" confusing signals to her mate, of being fertile but temporarily unavailable, her importance and requirement will simply decrease directly proportional to her age. Like her father, her possessor too will desert her in search for younger females who can give him yet more children.

If that is the way it works, Ayla is ready for it. After all, food and shelter for herself and the children she will have in the future, is of utmost importance. Therefore, she has no objections to the women pampering her and themselves in preparation for a well-planned fertility scam. 

Being beautiful and desirable feels good. And the meaning of beauty in Ayla's community, is fertility. 


Little does she know, that over the next few millenia, Egypt will be home to some of the most physically beautiful women in the world - women who will go on to set some of the most iconic and outstanding trends in beauty.

*****************************************


References:
* Universal World History, Volume One, Edited by J.A Hammerton
Painted Ladies by Kate Douglas, www.newscientist.com
Fashions in Makeup: From Ancient to Modern Times by Richard Corson
From Interaction to Symbol: A systems view of the evolution of signs and communication by Piotr Sadowski
The Mammoth Hunters, Book Three by Jean M. Auel
www.historyforkids.org/egypt
www.historyofcosmetics.net
Women in Pre-Historic Art by Camilla Power
www.cosmeticsinfo.org


P.S - Thank you for taking time out from your busy schedule and reading my blog.
 If you are enjoying reading these articles, may I request you to please follow this blog by signing into Blogger with your Google ID and share the link to any article that you like the most here - on Facebook, Twitter, Google plus and any other social media you may be using...so your friends can visit too?  :-)
I am a new author and I would be grateful for any kind of encouragement from my readers. It is a tough world out there for new authors!Thanks once again! Hope you love reading my articles as much as I love writing them!


Pallavi

Kent, Ohio

Sunday, 10 August 2014

CURTAIN RAISER - IT'S A BEAUTIFUL WORLD!




"Love of beauty is taste; creation of beauty is art." - Ralph Waldo Emerson


Since time immemorial, mankind has been in the pursuit of physical perfection. A world divided by race, religion, culture, language, colour, sexual orientation and distribution of wealth, comes together in its eternal quest for beauty. Men and women, rich and poor, the Caucasian and the African, pale and tanned, red and yellow, Hindu and Christian and Muslim, theist and atheist, gay and straight, royalty and working class....every single person on this planet, everywhere, at every moment is striving to achieve beauty, in some form or the other.

This universal human pursuit of beauty has often made us look at Nature for inspiration, has motivated scientific breakthroughs, has propelled trades and businesses (from ancient inter-civilization trades between Indus Valley and Mesopotamia, to current multi-gazillion dollar luxury brands) and has challenged the convention of "being content with what we have". No, we never did, do not and will not ever accept the look biology gave us. Since the beginning of written (or cave-painted) history we have been adding, concealing, colouring, weaving, braiding, priming, waxing, threading, conditioning, bleaching and generally manipulating the body we are born with.
Our wish to look, feel and be beautiful is our ancestor's gift to us which has been passed on from generation to generation over countless centuries and countless eras. 

But how or where did it start? Not the quest for beauty - that is ingrained in everything Nature made, including plants and animals, from the richly coloured peacocks to the dainty, vibrant, dancing flowers - but the definition of what is beautiful and what is not. 
Who defined what is beautiful? Who told us what is worth seeking? Genes? Art? Nature? The eyes of the beholder? 
Why is a straight nose preferred over a blunt, thick one? 
What kind of complexion does the world really wish to have? Pale and bloodless? Ruddy and weathered? Or glowing and tanned? A delicate porcelain, a golden wheat or a rich, smooth coffee? Or some other permutation? 
A curvy girl or a skinny girl? 
Flowing long hair or a bouncy, sleek bob? 
Almond eyes? Doe eyes? Limpid eyes? Liquid eyes? Sparkling eyes? Warm eyes? Intelligent eyes?
What is the definition of a healthy glow? 
Why is it that people who keep hammering "imperfection is beautiful" secretly want a blemish free perfect skin? 
A tall, dark and handsome man with warm brown eyes or a tall, fair and handsome man with piercing ice blue eyes- who decides? 
Full lips or thin lips? Glossy lips or matte lips? 
Eyebrows - thick, thin, full, half, arched, natural, none? 
And why? 
Why this and not that?

Let's face it. Natural may be lovely, but mind-blowing, mate-catching beauty is an endeavor. A lot goes into it. 

Over the next few articles, one every week,we will deconstruct and reverse engineer the psyche behind the quest to look beautiful and desirable, era by era. We'll take an in-depth look at how changing times and changing social structures have changed our notions of beauty.

We'll start from as early in time as we can find any kind of recorded history of, way before Christ, and journey down the lanes of prettiness to medieval ages to the Renaissance period to today, here, right now. I will also take a look at the beauty culture in India, including beauty rituals that have passed on for generations amongst the women of my own family.

Come with me on a journey across time, through melting canvases of beauty, through ideas that have time and again contradicted themselves, through ever changing, ever new dogmas of loveliness. Meet people from places near and far and from eras gone by and hear from them what they thought was the definition of physical perfection in their time and their place.
Some of their ideas may shock you, some you may find downright absurd and hilarious and some you may agree with. See for yourself how far man is willing to go in the quest for physical (or, at least facial) perfection.
Take a look at the face of beauty as reflected on the mirror of time.

Bon Voyage!


And I hope we shall emerge from this journey a little more appreciative of the beauty Nature has bestowed upon the human form and be thankful that today we have more independence, more choices, safe medical practices and a more accepting society than our ancestors had - in terms of FACE VALUE.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
P.S - Thank you for taking time out from your busy schedule and reading my blog.
 If you are enjoying reading these articles, may I request you to please follow this blog by signing into Blogger with your Google ID and share the link to any article that you like the most here - on Facebook, Twitter, Google plus and any other social media you may be using...so your friends can visit too? :)
I am a new author and I would be grateful for any kind of encouragement from my readers. It is a tough world out there for new authors!Thanks once again! Hope you love reading my articles as much as I loved writing them! 

Pallavi

August 10th, 2014
Kent
Ohio