Guest guest Posted May 14, 2004 Report Share Posted May 14, 2004 Hair Folklore From ~ http://www.longhairlovers.com " The Celts believed hair to have magickal powers, especially a woman's hair. For this reason, women were forbidden to go about at night, outside of their houses, with their hair unbound. All that magick was too wild and tempting, and could attract evil spirits to her and her family. Braiding the hair can also be a magickal act; for centuries women would braid their hair and cast love spells, protection spells, and other such things. They might strengthen the spell by weaving flowers or ribbons into the braid. The idea was that, since a braid is a kind of knot, the spell was tied into the hair with the braid, and utilized the natural magick of the hair. This was the *real* reason the ancient Jews, and the early church required women to cover their hair: fear of the power inherent in the hair of a woman. Also, the Cree Indians believe that the hair is an extension of the soul. This was relevant not only regarding length, but in the way one wears one's hair; it is an expression of the inner you. " --Courtesy of 00goddess, a Longhairlovers visitor. " Hair has traditionally held healthy magic for young mothers around the world. Irish women once believed that their hair, which had grown so abundantly in pregnancy, must therefore possess special powers. So they pulled skeins of it from their heads and wove it into amulets for their babies. " -- The Body Shop Book: Skin, Hair and Body Care. Penguin Books, 1994. " The Victorians believed that long, lush hair was a sign of a woman's fertility. Sparse, short or thin hair was considered a sign that a woman would not bear many children. With infant mortality rather high, being able to have gobs of kids was essential. As an example, read Hedda Gabler, by Ibsen. " --Courtesy of Laura, a Longhairlovers visitor. " The Knight of La Tour Landry, who wrote a book for his daughter's edification around 1370, was extremely strict when it came to talking about fashion and used the Biblical story about Kind David and the beautiful Bathsheba to warn against the evils of hairdressing. 'This sin stemmed from . . . her pride in her beautiful hair, the source of numerous evils. Every woman should therefore groom and dress in secret; she should not take pride in her hairdo.' " Throughout the Middle Ages, showing hair went in and out of fashion. Hairstyling was, however, a favorite pastime of fashionable women in the Middle Ages. Because a high forehead was considered particularly attractive, hairlines often needed to be plucked back, removed with pitch, or even scalded with a hot needle. Dark or red hair could be bleached to achieve the desired blondness; in particular, red-haired women had to be careful, for popular lore held that 'one cannot find a quiet redhead/That all are violent cannot be gainsaid.' " Egg white was often used as a sort of gel to keep elaborate hairstyles in place. Spices such as fennel, anise, cardamom, and cinnamon could be put in one's hair to make it smell sweet. The 13th-century romance Roman de la Rose offered this advice: 'If [a woman] has not a beautiful face, let her use common sense and offer to the eye the beautiful tresses that fall upon her neck, because she knows that her hair is beautiful and nicely braided.' " -- Excerpt from Medieval Woman: An Illuminated Calendar. Workman Publishing, New York, 1999. " In myth, a woman with masses of hair was seen as positively terrifying. India's Tantric sages warned that unbinding a woman's hair would unleash catastrophe. Medieval Christians believed witches unbraided their hair to brew up tempests. Scottish girls from seafaring families still honor that conviction, leaving their hair alone on the nights when their brothers set out to sea. Even today, the quaintly folkloric tradition of the maypole dance refers to the mythical properties and the power of plaiting and unplaiting hair. . . " Fear of another kind motivated the early Christian church. It was believed that bats, the devil's own messengers, would become ensnared in it, which is why women had to wear hats to church. " -- The Body Shop Book: Skin, Hair and Body Care. Penguin Books, 1994. " A lock of hair is a traditional token of love. A medieval knight would ride to battle with a lock of his lady's hair, anonymously given because milady would often be married to another long before the knight returned home from his adventure. " --The Body Shop Book: Skin, Hair and Body Care. Penguin Books, 1994 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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