Check out wikipedia. There was one product developed in the late 1800s (“Mum,” which was zinc based), then not much happened until it was repackaged as Ban roll-on in the 1940s.
The idea that sweating is bad is very much a modern concept.
zinc oxide basically dries out the skin and have some anti-inflammatory, hence why its used as diaper cream(babies and adults and used for older people who are prone to stasis dermatitis) in 40%/20% apparently its also useful for specific types of dermatitis, like perioral dermatitis.
To add to this, sweating was normal, and though there were various ways to deal with the smell of body odor, the rich mostly just caked on perfumes like how a teenage boy, discovering girls for the first time, over-does the axe body spray (or whatever kids these days use, lol.).
Outside of perfume, which was ridiculously expensive, they’d make do with things like potpourri in little baggies or herbs or flowers. Whatever they could get, and didn’t break the bank.
Other methods of keeping it in check include things like bathing and simply going nose-blind, and contrary to popular belief, people did bathe regularly- including at public baths.
/jk. Guess my point was today we (western weirdos?) use antiperspirants like sweating like plebs is gross. Similarly, it’s rather normal to bathe after a workout or something where you were sweating. sweating is normal, sure. but we’re rather weird about it compared to back then.
Some cultures started bathing but many did not until later on. The “Dark Ages” was a time where bathing was nearly nonexistent and cleanliness wasn’t even in people’s minds. People would relieve themselves in buckets and just toss it out the window.
Here is a really good one. Look up information about the Palace of Versailles, huge building with tons of rooms and huge parties with tons of lord’s and ladies’ eating and drinking but no bathrooms. People would relieve themselves in the stairwell’s. That is why the upperclass wore tons of perfume, to overcome the stench. Modern society has come a long way in just a few hundred years.
They weren’t.
Check out wikipedia. There was one product developed in the late 1800s (“Mum,” which was zinc based), then not much happened until it was repackaged as Ban roll-on in the 1940s.
The idea that sweating is bad is very much a modern concept.
zinc oxide basically dries out the skin and have some anti-inflammatory, hence why its used as diaper cream(babies and adults and used for older people who are prone to stasis dermatitis) in 40%/20% apparently its also useful for specific types of dermatitis, like perioral dermatitis.
To add to this, sweating was normal, and though there were various ways to deal with the smell of body odor, the rich mostly just caked on perfumes like how a teenage boy, discovering girls for the first time, over-does the axe body spray (or whatever kids these days use, lol.).
Outside of perfume, which was ridiculously expensive, they’d make do with things like potpourri in little baggies or herbs or flowers. Whatever they could get, and didn’t break the bank.
Other methods of keeping it in check include things like bathing and simply going nose-blind, and contrary to popular belief, people did bathe regularly- including at public baths.
To add to this: sweating still is normal
you don’t burn off your pores? wierdo.
/jk. Guess my point was today we (western weirdos?) use antiperspirants like sweating like plebs is gross. Similarly, it’s rather normal to bathe after a workout or something where you were sweating. sweating is normal, sure. but we’re rather weird about it compared to back then.
It was only a slightly humoristic reply to your “sweating was normal” is all :)
I had first read op as “antidepressants” and I was VERY confused at your response.
What’s even better is just the other night I was on this thread about Frankincense being an antidepressant. So my brain immediately went to that.
Is that shit still Bible-times level expensive or is it like the cheapest shit now?
Not sure how expensive it was during biblical times, but you can buy frankincense resin for $10/100 Gram, so seems cheap.
LMAO, I did the same. No worries.
Yeah, before then you just stunk.
Some cultures started bathing but many did not until later on. The “Dark Ages” was a time where bathing was nearly nonexistent and cleanliness wasn’t even in people’s minds. People would relieve themselves in buckets and just toss it out the window.
Here is a really good one. Look up information about the Palace of Versailles, huge building with tons of rooms and huge parties with tons of lord’s and ladies’ eating and drinking but no bathrooms. People would relieve themselves in the stairwell’s. That is why the upperclass wore tons of perfume, to overcome the stench. Modern society has come a long way in just a few hundred years.
Didn’t Versailles have garderobes?