Relief
from Tomb of Pharaoh Horemheb showing perfume cones on the heads of the
guests.
Perfume ungents were discovered in Egyptian graves
that date from the time of the Unification. The perfume oils
were made by covering flowers in goose grease or other fats and
imparting the fragrance to the oil. This is a far cry from
the bottles of French perfume we use to splash on scent, today.
The elite Egyptian women used these ungents, or oils, by scooping
out a quantity and spreading it on their person. Scenes also
show the wearing of cones of fragrant oils atop their wigs.
The solidified oil, or perhaps wax, would melt as the evening wore
on, releasing the fragrance.
Delicate perfume spoons were carved to facilitate
this part of the ladies toilette. Four such spoons are shown
on this page.
In the early graves, oils were kept in pottery jars. But
later stone jars and pots were made to contain the ungents.
In the Tomb of Tutankhamen a comical lion shaped perfume pot
was part of the boy kings treasures.
These perfume oils were highly valued and very portable, so they
were often the target of thieves. The fragrant scent of flowers
must have often accompanied the tomb robbers as they rushed
out of the Valley of the Kings to conceal their "ill gotten
gains".
The flowers for the perfumes came from areas like
the Faiyum where they are still grown today. The earliest
Egyptians moved toward the Nile as grass lands and forest dried
out in climate change and brought the love of fragrance and thus
the horticulture of flowers with them.
However, perfume, as we know it, was not developed until the the
Arabs developed a process of distillation in the 7th century. Then
perfume oils and scented waters could be made.
The French began developing perfume in the mid 1600's and the trade
bonds between the French and Egypt would have only become stronger
after Napoleon invaded in the late 1700's.
The French would have then had ample materials to
experiment on this new product. Georgian England was awash
with scent.
And the thriving trade of perfumes between France and the rest
of the world continued through revolution and attempts at world
domination.
Today, still, many of those famous French perfumes that we know
have component oils that come from the Faiyum in Egypt. And
owners of shops in Cairo will speak fondly of wearing the flowing
white Arab robes around the streets of Paris when making their sales
calls.