Queen of scents: Fancy wearing the same perfume as Cleopatra? | Malay Mail

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NEW YORK, May 15 — She is without doubt the most famous woman of Antiquity. For centuries, archeologists have been trying to unravel the many mysteries surrounding Cleopatra, the last queen of Egypt. Researchers at the University of Hawaii are trying to shed light on a very specific aspect of her...

NEW YORK, May 15 — She is without doubt the most famous woman of Antiquity. For centuries, archeologists have been trying to unravel the many mysteries surrounding Cleopatra, the last queen of Egypt. Researchers at the University of Hawaii are trying to shed light on a very specific aspect of her personal taste: Her perfume.

Professors Robert Littman and Jay Silverstein embarked on this ambitious project in 2012, when they excavated a perfume-making site in the ruins of the Lower Egyptian city of Thmuis, now called Tell el-Timai. There, they notably discovered perfume bottles and amphorae containing dry residues of fragrance.

The archaeologists then approached researchers Dora Goldsmith and Sean Coughlin — two experts on ancient Egyptian perfume — to help them test different ancient perfume recipes. The goal was to reproduce the fragrance that Queen Cleopatra VII Philopator may have worn, according to traditional methods described in ancient texts. In the fourth century BC, EgyptianBased on these documents, the researchers found that two fragrances were particularly prized by the elites of ancient Egypt.

While this perfume was included in the exhibition “Queens of Egypt” at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C., there are still some uncertainties about the accuracy of its composition. According to , the research team is preparing to conduct further chemical analysis to recreate even more accurately the perfume Cleopatra may have worn. They also plan to return to Egypt this summer to bring a sample of the residue to Abdelrahman Medhat, a conservator at the Cairo Museum.

Despite advances in science, it is extremely difficult to make perfect replicas of perfumes worn centuries ago. In 2005, perfumer Mandy Aftel tried, unsuccessfully, to recreate a perfume worn by Sherit, a four- or five-year-old Egyptian girl whose mummy has been preserved for decades in a San Diego museum. — ETX Studio

 

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