Recently I wrote about the
most beautiful women in the world
according to AskMen, Forbes, Premiere and other magazines that have
invoked hundreds of comments. The public has implicitly proved that in
the world of immaculate fashion models, famous actors and celebrities,
beauty still remains a relative concept.
Forms of Beauty
In my post today I’d like to speak about some non-classic forms of
beauty that once existed or still have a place in some countries. I’m
sure that some of them will turn out to be a real surprise. So let’s
start.
Beauties of the Past
To be a fashion-monger in ancient Egypt you would have to be
bald-headed! The beautiful shape of the skull was one of the forms of
beauty. Those days if your skull was not so perfectly shaped to boast,
you would have to wear a lace from wool and flax.
To be beautiful in Ancient Rome you would have to be a blond. (That’s
where it all started!) Girls were thoroughly dyeing their hair with
various substances trying to reach the needed effect. Since some of the
colorants were poisonous, at the end you could have ended up being bald
instead of blond.
Medieval ladies had to wear tight corsets from early childhood. By
adulthood they looked like they were suffering from rachitis also known
as rickets.
The other fashion trend was the big size of the pupil. Believe it or
not, women were instilling the juice of belladonna into the eyes. (Most
of you might know that it’s a poisonous plant containing atropine). By
the way, “belladonna” means “beautiful women” in Italian.
Blond hair was still fashionable as well, but there was a slight
problem. It was considered unworthy for devout, pious ladies to use
colorants. So they spent hours bleaching their natural hair color under
the scorching sun’s rays that often resulted in sunstroke.
- The Spain of the XV century
The Spain of the XV century was too over-virtuous. Hard to imagine,
but this was the period when it was improper to have outstanding “female
shapes”. Young girls were bound with special chest plates to keep their
breast from growing. Women’s dresses resembled a dull shell, and even
the tips of shoes had to be hidden under the skirt.
The Italian Renaissance was more lenient to the human body. It had
nothing against natural body proportions and even went further. The
ladies of that time should have been strong and sturdy, with broad
shoulders and muscular forearms. At the same time, high foreheads were
in fashion, so the ladies not only trimmed the hair, but fully removed
the eyebrows as well.
The XVII century was a golden time! It was fashionable to be fat: the
fatter you are – the better. Plump woman blossoming with health
embodied the idea of abundance, fertility and motherhood. All of us
might have seen the paintings created by artists of that time, who
portrayed plump elephantine female bodies with lush hips and bumps of
cellulite.
The XVIII century is the century of the coiffure. (More about it in my post
here).
The heavy bundles of feathers, fruits, ships and other arrangements set
on the head were a real nightmare. Since the coiffure took a very long
time to create, you would have to wear it on your head for at least a
few days and sleep on a special neck pillow. Image how difficult simple
hygiene would be!
The XIX century brought its own beauty laws. The thin and pale girls
with a melancholy expression on their faces and unhealthy flush on their
cheeks were admired. It was very unworthy for a decent girl of that
time to use make-up, so they drank vinegar to achieve the pallor effect
and ate lots of sweets and strawberries that caused allergic red spots
on their cheeks. This was also the time when the first guides on how to
stay on a diet appeared. If you were a fleshy women, you were not if
favor any longer.
Beauty According to Different Nations
The Red Karens tribe somewhere between Burma and Thailand have a very
special women’s beauty model: long necks. The more copper rings the
woman wears on her neck, the more attractive she is considered to be.
Without the rings the woman is sure to die though.
Men of the Maasai tribe think that the real beauty is in the … ears.
Well not exactly the ears, but the size of the hole in the earlobe. So
Maasai girls strive to keep their earlobes as stretched out as possible.
The most glorious Maasai female has no two front teeth, and most of her head is shaved bald.
Maori people (the natives of New Zealand) believe the beauty of their
women is enhanced by tattoos. They sincerely believe that the women of
their tribe look better when their lips and chins are covered with
tattoos. The more ink that has been injected into the lips of a
Polynesian bride, the more attractive the girl is.
While the women of the Western world seek to lose weight by all
possible means, the thicker you are in Mauritania, the more beautiful.
The more the Moorish bride weighs, the more desirable she is.
If you happen to see a dark-skinned woman with a clay plate in her
lower lip, then you know you’ve met Mursi. This tribe lives in Ethiopia
and their beauty standards can be considered cruel by Western society.
Labial plates can reach 15 cm in diameter, and the larger the decoration
is, the more beautiful the woman is!
So, has your definition of beauty changed?
Tell us what you think of “beauty” in the comments below!
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