Soaps have a dirty history. Even Greeks and Roman didn't use them to clean their bodies (2024)

Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.” That’s what the CDC has advised all Americans to do to prevent the spread of COVID-19 during this pandemic.

It’s common-sense advice. Thesurfactants found in soap lift germs from the skin, and water then washes them away. Soap is inexpensive and ubiquitous; it’s a consumer product found in every household across the country.

Yet few people know the long and dirty history of making soap, the product we all rely on to clean our skin.I’m a historian who focuses on material culturein much of my research. As I started digging into what’s known about soap’s use in the past, I was surprised to discover its messy origins.

Gross ingredients to clean things up

Ancient Mesopotamians were first to producea kind of soap by cooking fatty acids – like the fat rendered from a slaughtered cow, sheep or goat – together with water and an alkaline likelye, a caustic substance derived from wood ashes. The result was a greasy and smelly goop that lifted away dirt.

An early mention of soap comes inRoman scholar Pliny the Elder’sbook “Naturalis Historia” from A.D. 77. He described soap as a pomade made of tallow – typically derived from beef fat – and ashes that the Gauls, particularly the men, applied to their hair to give it “a reddish tint.”

Ancient people used these early soaps to clean wool or cotton fibers before weaving them into cloth, rather than for human hygiene. Not even the Greeks and Romans, who pioneered running water and public baths,used soap to clean their bodies. Instead, men and women immersed themselves in water baths and then smeared their bodies with scented olive oils. They used ametal or reed scraper called a strigilto remove any remaining oil or grime.

Also read: This is what makes the humble soap our best bet against coronavirus

By the Middle Ages, new vegetable-oil-based soaps, which were hailed for their mildness and purity and smelled good, had come into use as luxury items among Europe’s most privileged classes. The first of these,Aleppo soap, a green, olive-oil-based bar soapinfused with aromatic laurel oil, was produced in Syria and brought to Europe by Christian crusaders and traders.

French, Italian, Spanish and eventually English versions soon followed. Of these,Jabon de Castilla, or Castile soap, named for the region of central Spain where it was produced, was the best known. The white, olive-oil-based bar soap was a wildly popular toiletry item among European royals. Castile soap becamea generic term for any hard soap of this type.

The settlement of the American colonies coincided with an age (1500s-1700s) when most Europeans, whether privileged or poor, had turned away from regular bathing out offear that water actually spread disease. Colonists used soap primarily for domestic cleaning, and soap-making was part of the seasonal domestic routine overseen by women.

As one Connecticut woman described it in 1775, women stored fat from butchering, grease from cooking and wood ashes over the winter months. In the spring, they made lye from the ashes and then boiled it with fat and grease in a giant kettle. This produced a soft soap that women used to wash thelinen shifts that colonists wore as undergarments.

In the new nation, the founding of soap manufactories like New York-basedColgate, founded in 1807, or the Cincinnati-basedProcter & Gamble, founded in 1837, increased the scale of soap production but did little to alter its ingredients or use. Middle-class Americanshad resumed water bathing, but still shunned soap.

Soap-making remained an extension of the tallow tradethat was closely allied with candle making. Soap itself was for laundry. At the first P&G factory, laborers used large cauldrons toboil down fat collected from homes, hotels and butchersto make the candles and soap they sold.

From cleaning objects to cleaning bodies

The Civil War was the watershed. Thanks to reformers who touted regular washing with water and soap as a sanitary measure to aid the Union war effort, bathing for personal hygiene caught on.Demand for inexpensive toilet soaps increaseddramatically among the masses.

Companies began to develop and market a variety of new products to consumers. In 1879, P&G introducedIvory soap, one of the first perfumed toilet soaps in the U.S. B.J. Johnson Soap Company of Milwaukee followed with their own palm-and-olive-oil-basedPalmolive soapin 1898. It was theworld’s best-selling soap by the early 1900s.

Soap chemistry also began to change, paving the way for the modern era. At P&G,decades of laboratory experimentswith imported coconut and palm oil, and then with domestically produced cottonseed oil, led to thediscovery of hydrogenated fats in 1909. These solid, vegetable-based fats revolutionized soap by making its manufacture less dependent on animal byproducts.Shortages of fats and oils for soapduring World Wars I and II also led to the discovery of synthetic detergents as a“superior” substitutefor fat-based laundry soaps, household cleaners and shampoos.

Today’s commercially manufactured soaps arehighly specialized, lab-engineered products. Synthesized animal fats and plant-based oils and bases are combined withchemical additives, including moisturizers, conditioners, lathering agents, colors and scents, to make soaps more appealing to the senses. But they cannot fully mask its mostly foul ingredients, includingshower gels’petroleum-based contents.

As a 1947 history of P&G observed: “Soap is a desperately ordinary substance to us.” As unremarkable as it is during normal times, soap has risen to prominence during this pandemic.

Judith Ridner, Professor of History, Mississippi State University

This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.

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Soaps have a dirty history. Even Greeks and Roman didn't use them to clean their bodies (2024)
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