When, where, why did clean shaving for men become the norm?

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Shaving was hard before the invention of metal knives.

I regret I do not now recall the name of the book but I read in one book about Ancient Egypt, which had pictures to prove it, that in very early times, I think before 3,000 BC, when pre-literate Ancient Egyptians scratched or coloured pictures, as they sometimes did, they showed their men, who were not naturally as hairy as other races, with unimpressive small beards, which are probably all that grew naturally for them.

From the Bronze Age, which roughly coincided with the appearance of literacy, Egyptian men were portrayed clean shaven. Men of some foreign nations, often also distinguished by their style of dress and other features, may be shown with beards, sometimes probably to conform to a stereotype to identify the picture as being of a Syrian or whatever.

It seems the Ancient Egyptians therefore adopted shaving around 5,000 years ago, almost as soon as it was easily possible once they had sharp enough metal implements. Thereafter, they stayed clean-shaven pretty well as long as their civilization lasted, so for the next 3 thousand years. That would be remarkable for other societies but less so for the Ancient Egyptians, who once they found a style that suited them tended to stay with it for an amazingly long time.

A sketch survives from Deir el-Medina, the village of the workers on the royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings in the New Kingdom (c 1550 - 1080 BC), probably made by one of the workmen in his spare time, of a man wearing the an Egyptian Royal Crown, looking slightly overdue for a shave, with bristles ('five O'clock shadow' we may now call it) showing on his chin and cheeks.

In other words one of the workmen was probably being slightly naughty in showing the King caught not looking at his best, and differently from the formal and invariably respectful portraits that the painters and sculptors of the Royal tombs had to produce in their day-jobs.

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I recall that when doctors/surgeons started to do this as part of hygiene for them I guess some time after Semmelweis and Lister that other men started to do so also. It is striking how common facial hair was among men in, say, the mid 19th century.

Upvote:3

I've read, a long time ago, that the current trend for men to be clean shaven started during WW1 when troops in the trenches had to wear gasmasks a lot. As these don't get a proper fit on a bearded face, the soldiers had to shave or risk death by gas. Later of course pilots wearing oxygen masks to be able to fly high altitude aircraft in WW2 (and the interbellum to a degree) would also need to be shaven for the same reason.

It sounds plausible, but I've not been able to independently verify it.

Upvote:9

As you said fashion for beards comes in and out, periodically. One of the earliest available detailed records is indeed Alexander. He not only introduced shaving in the army but also introduced this fashion in the society. As you can see from many surviving statues, depictions on the coins, mosaics and paintings of Hellenistic period. The Greeks of the earlier period usually wear beards, as we can also see from many pictures and statues. In some periods, Babylonians and Egyptians probably shaved but wore artificial decorative beards (like in 17 century Europeans cut their hair short and wore enormous wigs).

This general pattern (fashion in and out) probably continues so far in prehistory, that it is impossible to discover any early detail.

The related question is why at all the hair on some parts of the body on a human of certain races grows almost unrestricted, to any length. (No animal has this feature). How could such a strange feature evolve? Imagine the beards of some men, if they NEVER shave or cut them. This would make life difficult. The only plausible explanation is that people started shaving and cutting their beards before the modern human races evolved. That's why this story stretches so far in the past that it is impossible to trace. Another related question (once addressed on this site) is how did our ancestors managed to shave with stone tools:-) The only thing which seems clear enough that they did somehow.

And the last remark: the fashion shows little dependence on available tools. Safe razors were already available in the end of 19th century, but this was the brief period when the fashion for enormous beards returned. See the portraits of men of 1890s.

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