The Scent of Love: Ancient Perfumes

How to make your own perfumes just like the ancient Greeks and Romans did

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Two mortar and pestles sit on a table

By Erin Branham

May 01, 2012

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Editor’s Note

This post was originally published in 2012 about a program called Spicy Scents at the Getty Villa. Since then, we’ve changed our programming to include a broader range of scents and perfume making. We’ve edited the post below to reflect some of these updates.

You can find information here on upcoming public programs about perfume and more!

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Therefore, when laughter-loving Aphrodite saw [Anchises], she loved him, and terribly desire seized her in her heart. She went to Cyprus, to Paphos, where her precinct is and fragrant altar, and passed into her sweet-smelling temple. There she went in and put to the glittering doors, and there the Graces bathed her with heavenly oil such as blooms upon the bodies of the eternal gods—oil divinely sweet, which she had by her, filled with fragrance.Homeric hymn, tr. H. G. Evelyn-White

The goddess of love, beauty, and desire, Aphrodite was also a mistress of the seductive arts, perfume primary among them. Accustomed as we are to the aromas of car exhaust and air-conditioned buildings, to us the ancient world would perhaps be most overpowering in terms of smell. Sweating men and animals and their waste filled a city’s streets, making it vital to set off sacred spaces as well as those of luxury by making them smell sweet. Fragrance was everywhere in the ancient world, from scented oils used to adorn the body to incense burnt in homes and temples.

Perfumes had many uses and meanings. They could be holy, used in the worship of the gods or the burial of the dead; they could be a symbol of status and superiority, used by athletes, aristocrats, politicians, and royalty; they could be medicinal, used to relieve ailments of the lungs or skin. In ancient Egypt, Greece, and across the Roman Empire, perfume was part of ritual, beauty, and commerce—much as it is today.

I investigated this ancient art to create Spicy Scents, a hands-on activity for Villa visitors. Here’s a primer on how ancient fragrances were made, followed by a DIY tutorial on how to make your own perfume, ancient-style.

A Short History of Ancient Perfumes

Written sources describing ancient perfume making are vague at best, though some writers such as Theophrastus (Greek, c. 370–285 BC) in his book On Odors and Pliny the Elder (Roman, A.D. 23–79) in his Natural History include lists of ingredients for perfumes, as well as some discussion of techniques and tools.

Tablets from Knossos, Crete, document oil deliveries to be processed by perfumers, and tablets from Mycenae, Thebes, and Pylos mention the work of perfumers. Visual sources of information were a little more helpful—the ancient Egyptians depicted perfume making, and there are humorous Roman frescoes from Pompeii and Herculaneum showing bands of cupids in perfume shops mixing scents.

Wall fresco with cupids and Psyche making perfume

Wall Fragment with Cupids and Psyche Making Perfume, AD 75–100, Roman. Plaster and pigment, 14 15/16 x 22 1/16 in. Getty Museum, 72.AG.81

Perfume bottle in the Shape of a Ram

Perfume bottle in the Shape of a Ram, 640–625 BC, Greek. Terracotta, 3 3/4 in. high, Getty Museum, 86.AE.696

Blue and red round perfume aryballos

Aryballos, 70–00 AD, Gallo-Roman. Bronze and champlevé enamel, 4 1/8 in. high. Getty Museum, 96.AC.190

Archaeology provides richer information, showing that in ancient Egypt, Palestine, and the Roman Empire, temples almost always had perfume factories nearby producing the great quantities of fragrances they needed. A 2003 archaeological project at Pyrgos on Cyprus, the island where Aphrodite first stepped foot on land after her birth at sea, discovered a perfume-making workshop from circa 1850 BC, the oldest one in the world.

My first discovery was that in the ancient world oils were used as the carrier medium for perfumes. In modern perfume making, an alcohol is usually the carrier medium, with essential oils added for fragrance, combined with fixatives, coloring agents, and preservatives. Alcohols evaporate much more quickly than oils do, thus dispersing scent into the air more rapidly. An ancient perfume would, therefore, be more subtle, and you’d have to be closer to the skin of the wearer to feel its heady power.

In Greece and Rome, the abundance of olive oil made it the most popular oil for the perfume industry, though other oils such as almond were popular as well. Cheaper oil was better (and still is) because it has less of its own scent to compete with the fragrant materials.

To impart fragrance, plant-based ingredients were used, including flowers, leaves, seeds, woods, resins, and gums. Animal-derived ingredients were also common, such as musk and civet, which are the glandular oils produced by the musk deer and the civet cat, as well as ambergris, a strange substance secreted and occasionally expelled by sperm whales. These aromas tend to be pungent and even unpleasant in their natural states, but act as fixatives in combination with other scents, accentuating them and making them last longer without imparting their own scents to the mixture.

As in ancient times, today more expensive perfumes still use mostly natural products—essential oils gathered from flowers, spices, and fruits, while cheaper ones are made from synthesized oils that approximate these natural scents.

A table shows jars with flower petals and other ingredients used in perfume making

The Art of Layering Scents

A perfume is made by layering scents according to how volatile they are, that is, how easily they evaporate. Top notes evaporate quickly—they are the first scent you smell in a perfume. Middle or heart notes form the main body of a perfume. Base notes are fixatives—they hold and blend the other ingredients, and they stay on the skin the longest, so you always smell them in combination with the other aromas of the perfume.

Animal-derived scents were the most precious base notes of the ancient world, as they still are today. Natural musk is almost impossible to come by now, and civet and ambergris are likewise fairly rare, so I had to settle for more common, but no less authentic, base notes for our perfume-making activity: frankincense, myrrh, and labdanum. All are resins, or plant sap.

Frankincense and myrrh can be purchased in their raw form of small nuggets, which you can grind and add to the olive oil into which they melt to lend their scent. Labdanum is a viscous, sticky, tarlike substance in its resin form. You can also purchase the essential oils of any or all of these substances. Even as an essential oil, labdanum is thick, black, and sticky.

To make your own perfume, only use one of the three, and only a little of one at that—4 to 5 nuggets or 2 to 3 drops of the essential oils in 2 ounces of olive oil. These scents are strong and can overpower your final perfume.

For middle notes, we used some scents that are still well-known in modern perfumery: rose, cinnamon, benzoin (more commonly known as styrax in the ancient world), and calamus (called by many names by ancient writers, including sweet flag or sweet rush). Rose and cinnamon were a favorite combination for the heart of a perfume. Rose petals can be added directly to the olive oil mixture—no more than 1 to 3 petals, though, or the rose will overwhelm your final mixture. Cinnamon can be added by breaking up the sticks into small pieces or even by shaking ground cinnamon into your oil. This combination makes a sweetly spicy scent, altered this way or that by the base note—atop frankincense’s piney smell it is more spicy, atop myrrh’s gentle warmth the rose can shine, and atop labdanum’s pungency, the cinnamon really pops.

My personal favorite is styrax, a deep, vanilla-y scent that is, like the base notes, a tree resin. It also can be purchased in its raw form, though it’s expensive that way. The essential oil is a honey-like liquid that can be added to the olive oil using a coffee stirrer to gather and then drip it into your perfume. I also love sweet rush. The root of the calamus plant, which can be ground and added, sweet rush has a strong, light, sweet smell, like gold for the nose.

At the perfume-making workshop, our top notes were spices you’ll recognize from your own kitchen: anise, the seed that gives licorice its distinctive scent; marjoram, the cousin of oregano that the ancient Greeks associated with joyous occasions like weddings; and coriander, the seed of cilantro. We advised visitors to use liberal amounts of these lighter scents so they would not get lost under the power of the heartier middle and base notes. Anise and coriander need to be lightly ground, while marjoram leaves can be added straight to your olive oil.

A favorite recipe of many was myrrh, rose, styrax, and marjoram for a warm, sweet perfume. Those who liked spicier scents might mix frankincense with cinnamon and a little sweet rush, then top it off with anise and coriander. Brave souls experimented with combinations of sweet and spicy, layering labdanum under styrax and cinnamon, topped with marjoram.

Visitors make perfumes inspired by ancient recipes during a Spicy Scents workshop at the Getty Villa

Two young visitors make perfumes inspired by ancient recipes during a Spicy Scents workshop at the Getty Villa

Steep, and Complete

To complete your perfume, let the mixture steep. Use an ounce or two of oil and a small amount of each selected scent. Then leave the perfume to settle for 24 hours, which allows the scents to rest. The mixture should then steep for at least 24 hours, at which point it can be strained—cheesecloth lets you wring the oil out while keeping all bits of ground materials out of the final mixture.

May Aphrodite sweeten your skin with fragrant oils so that you taste a little of her power!

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