Titolo: Profumi unguenti acconciature in Pompei antica. II Edizione Inglese / Italiano. Perfumes, unguents and hairstyles in ancient Pompeii
Autori: Carlo Giordano, Angelandrea Casale
Editore: Bardi Editore
Collana: Collezione archeologica
Lingua: Inglese / Italiano
Pagine: 95
Formato: in 8°, rilegatura cartonata con bandelle
Illustrazioni: 56 a colori
Anno: 2007
Codice ISBN: 978-88-88620-43-5
Prezzo (di copertina): 20,00 Euro
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Nuova edizione rivista e ampliata da Laurentino García y García
INDEX
Preface to the second edition
Introduction
Chapter I: Perfumes and unguents
Chapter II: Women's coiffure
Chapter III: Men's coiffure
Bibliography
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
This successful essay is the posthumous work of the regretted Professor Carlo
Giordano. Since it had been out of print for several years, I
asked his co-author, Angelandrea Casale, to revise it and, if needed, update
it, but with his usual graciousness he declined my invitation and formally
conferred upon me the honor of preparing this second edition. The text is still
valid today, in spite of the fifteen years gone by since its first publication,
so I limited my editing to revising the form of the information supplied and
some minor updating. Notably, I added several historical annotations, a few
notes, and some bibliographical references, and replaced some of the figures.
As we all know, perfumes are substances emitting an intense and pleasing odor.
The simpler ones are the natural perfumes of vegetable origin, derived from
essential oils that are sometimes produced by the plant in its natural state,
as in the case of the oil extracted from the petals of roses or violets, or the
leaves of lavender (fig. 1); or come in the form of glucose, as in the case of
jasmine and certain tuberous plants, such as the iris. The oils can also be extracted
from bark, as in the case of cinnamon, from fruit (bergamot, lemon, orange),
and from seeds (anise, almonds), and also from certain resins. The composition
of perfumes, however, is usually quite elaborate, since they are prepared in
alcoholic solutions and blended with gum, resins, and ointments that are used
to fix them and thus delay their evaporation.
The Romans, who were not familiar with distillation, macerated the raw material
- flowers or leaves - in oil. But they knew the power of perfumes very well,
and used them as a token of high social status. In Süskind's successful novel
Perfume, the main character, Grenouille, affirms that he who ruled scent ruled
the hearts of men, a statement that is not unconnected to Catullus' verses: Sed
contra accipies meros amores seu quid suavius elegantiusve est: nam unguentum
dabo, quod meae puellae donarunt Veneres Cupidesque. Quod tu cum olfacies, deos
rogabis, totum ut te faciant, Fabulle, nasum (But in return, you will receive
an affectionate greeting as well as something that is especially sweet and
elegant: for I will give you the perfume that the Venuses and Cupids gave to my
beloved. When you smell it, my friend Fabullus, you will ask the gods, to make
all of you a nose) Unguents prepared for external use as salves contained
odoriferous essences and were used as perfumes. Egyptian women used them in
abundance in the form of cones placed on the head, which, as they slowly
liquefied onto the hair, simply by the effect of body heat, impregnated the
hair, neck, and arms with intense and inviting scents. Embalmers used them to
preserve corpses as long as possible. Their beneficial effects also conquered
Roman matrons, who used spoons and spatulas to scoop up and spread the precious
substances preserved in pyxides and boxes. Luxury and its most conspicuous
manifestations in fashion and everyday practices - which had previously
complied with the ideal of sober austerity of rural Latium - spread in Rome and
the Roman world after the conquest of Greece, Asia Minor and, above all, Egypt,
in the second and first centuries BC.
During the same period, personal and collective hygiene improved thanks to the
creation of baths (thermae), so cherished by the Romans. The rich now had baths
in their houses, and everybody could go to the public baths. The essay that
follows does not deal with the rapid spread of gold ornaments and jewelry, so
dazzlingly documented by the excavation of the Vesuvian cities and villas; nor
with the increasing extravagance in the use of precious cloth. It concentrates,
instead, on the production and use of perfumes and unguents, which the Oriental
emporia of Delos and Alexandria had previously monopolized, being at once their
main producers and consumers. Of course, Italy and the Roman world had been
acquainted with these luxuries, but they were reserved for religious purposes
rather than being employed for personal and everyday use. After the
above-mentioned conquests, the diffusion and demand for these products was such
that their massive importation engendered an economic crisis. As early as the
first decades of the Empire, however, in the first half of the first century
BC, Campania, launched an increasing competition with Oriental imports. The
region boasted fine flower crops, especially at Capua, Neapolis, and Paestum,
and it is from flowers that most of the essences of perfumes and unguents are
extracted. The fertility of its soil and the mildness of its climate made
Campania Felix an Eden, a natural hothouse where flowers thrived. A renowned
painting from Stabiae echoes this sense of an eternal spring, which the ancient
Romans experienced in its pristine fullness and integrity (fig. 2). The
region's long-standing and lucrative olive and grape production, both of which,
especially the latter, yield basic substances for perfume making, also favored
the flourishing of the perfume trade. Even the containers for the essences, the
famous unguentaria - especially glass ones - were produced in great quantities
in Campania. Finally, the importance gained by the port of Pozzuoli also played
a significant role in this process. These aspects are documented at Pompeii,
too, where we find evidence both of a widespread use of flowers (figs. 3-5) and
of the existence of unguentaria and oficinae where perfume was sold. Carlo
Giordano's elegant prose will make the reading of this essay pleasant not only
for the many women who will find in its pages ideas and curiosities that still
retain their interest and validity today - when the words herbalist,
phytotherapy, and aromatherapy, often attested in the works of classical and
medieval authors, have returned in fashion - but also to the specialist, who
will appreciate Giordano's wealth of quotations from classical authors and his
accurate information about Pompeian archaeological finds. Laurentino García y
García PREFACE Prof. Carlo Giordano was one of the first people I met when I
first arrived at the Superintendency of Pompeii. I soon came to appreciate his
great humanity. People immediately took to him for his affability, his wit, his
ability to put everyone immediately at their ease with the offer of a cup of
coffee or a sugar drop, or with a prompt and always appropriate quote of a poet
or an ancient graffito. He had an endless stock of those quotes, bearing
witness to his wide-ranging knowledge and long familiarity with Roman literary
sources and the Pompeian epigraphic record. Indeed, this was his vocation as a
scholar: not so much archaeology intended as the study of monuments and their
decorative programs, but rather the study of Pompeian and, more in general,
Roman antiquity, i.e., the reconstructing of various aspects of everyday life
on the evidence of the classics, as well as the more ephemeral, but also more
spontaneous testimonies provided by the writings and graffiti traced on the
walls of Pompeii. His scholarly interest in the everyday life of bankers,
craftsmen, magistrates, and the common people was undoubtedly a natural
consequence of his humanity, of his interest in Man. The volume I have the
pleasure of introducing here is a study in the same vein. It was written with
the valuable assistance of Giordano's collaborator Angelandrea Casale, without
whom this work would never have seen the light. Casale must also be given
credit for working in perfect agreement with the author. The book provides an
enjoyable picture of female vanity, but also, to a lesser extent, of men's. As
was in his style, he did not draw merely on archaeological data, but also, and
above all, on his knowledge of literary and epigraphic sources, which are very
frequently cited in the text. Still, these pages remain easy to read and
enjoyable, because the testimonies and references are not presented in an arid
and pedantic tone: on the contrary, they are dropped in the text in a totally
natural way, almost casually, without breaking its spontaneous and captivating
flow. The text also owes its charm to the fact that Carlo Giordano usually
portrays the whims and caprices of Pompeian matrons with the same serene
detachment and benign irony that were his trademark, and which should stand as
an example for all of us.
Baldassare Conticello - Superintending Archaeologist of Pompeii
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