9/12/2023 0 Comments Medieval hairstyles male400 BC: Ancient Romans reacted against the long, heavy beards of the Greeks, keeping their beards clipped and neat or shaving their beards completely. In the fourth century AD, Ammianus Marcellinus, a Roman soldier wrote, ‘Do you suppose that your beard creates brains …? Take my advice and shave it off at once for that beard is a creator of lice and not of brains.’Ĥ00– 300 BC: Alexander the Great was clean-shaven and encouraged his soldiers shave before battle, as beards could be grabbed by enemies in “hand-to-beard combat.”Ĭ. (Many Greek men wished to emulate the gods Zeus and Heracles, both who were shown with huge beards.) Greeks only cut their beards during times of mourning.Ĭ. The ability to grow a full beard at that time was a sign of high status and wisdom. 800 BC– 600 AD: The Ancient Greeks were proud of their beards. 1500– 1200 BC: Scandinavian burial mounds contain elaborate bronze razors with handles shaped like the heads of horses.Ĭ. 2900– 500 BC: Mesopotamian rulers and elites wore beards, which were signs of masculinity and strength.Ĭ. (The god Osiris wore a beard.) Wigs were also common to protect the head from the sun.Ĭ. However, men (and sometimes women) of noble birth wore artificial beards as a sign of divinity. Remember: Back then, lice and staying clean was more of a challenge. 3000– 332 BC: Ancient Egyptian nobles shaved their heads and bodies because they highly valued hairlessness. 3000 BC: Copper razors arrived in India and Egypt.Ĭ. 30,000 BC: Ancient cave paintings often depict men without beards, and suggest that people shaved or removed unwanted hair with clamshells, which were used like tweezers, or with blades made of flint.Ĭ. Take a look at how cultures from the ancient Egyptians to the more recent French monarchies decided whether or not to grow a beard! Shaving and Facial Hair in Ancient HistoryĬ.
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