ancient roman beauty remedies
One of the best things about writing on the subject of ancient Rome
is that I'm in a constant state of learning and research. Today, in
learning a bit more about the Roman poet Ovid's life, I discovered that
he wrote an early primer to helping women become more beautiful. I've
read the Metamorphoses and Amores but was unfamiliar with his Medicamina Faciei Femineae or Women's Facial Cosmetics or sometimes seen as The Art of Beauty.
The fragment we have from this book (link above) is fascinating,
offering up three and a half beauty tips for Roman women. The first is
a lengthy and messy recipe on how to make your skin whiter. The second
recipe on getting rid of pimples would, as we know now, kill you slowly
over time. I imagine that many women paid such a high price to be
beautiful:
Then make haste and bake pale lupins and windy beans. Of these take six pounds each and grind the whole in the mill. Add thereto white lead and the scum of ruddy nitre and Illyrian iris, which must be kneaded by young and sturdy arms. And when they are duly bruised, an ounce should be the proper weight. If you add the glutinous matter wherewith the Halcyon cements its nest, you will have a certain cure for spots and pimples. As for the dose, one ounce applied in two equal portions is what I prescribe. To bind the mixture and to make it easy of application, add some honey from the honeycombs of Attica.
That pesky lead. Unfortunately, it was a main additive to cosmetics for centuries. Romans used it in many things, including as a sweetener for wine, which is considered by some to be the cause of dementia that affected many Roman emperors.
There is also a recipe to get rid of blackheads and this little tidbit which is fragmented:
I have seen a woman pound up poppies soaked in cold water and rub her cheeks with them. . . .
Wonder what the poppies did? I also wonder why Ovid decided to concern himself so much with beauty concoctions that he would write a book for the ladies to use. Perhaps he was a little bit entrepreneurial?
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