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A woman's body was beautified
and her soul restored at the bath. The perspiring body was rubbed
with hand mitts made of silk and linen to cleanse it of all the
old skin, and lathered up numerous times to purify it of toxins.
For such an important social
activity, preparation for the bath was very important. Every
woman had typically around 15 different bathing accessories,
and for women of means the list could be much longer. Examples
of these accessories are today regarded as works of art and can
be seen in many Eastern museums.
Here are the must have's
for any Turkish Bath bundle:
Wide, round bowls in silver,
copper or bronze for pouring water over the head and body. These
were intricately decorated by hand with reliefs and inlays.
Thin bath towels called peshtemal
were wrapped around the body and the head. These were woven from
cotton or silk, either embroidered or with modern-looking plaid
designs. The largest peshtemal was wrapped around the waist,
the middle size around the shoulders and the smallest around
the head. Bath bundles also included various other fabrics and
cloths for keeping the head warm, for spreading on the floor
to sit on or special ceremonial robes like a silk robe for the
bride in a bridal bath, etc.
The soap dish was a lidded container
with a handle on top and holes underneath like a sieve. Soaps,
combs and various rubbing, exfoliating and lathering mitts like
kese, a silk mitt or loofah pieces and cloths, were placed inside
it.
Other items typically found
in the bundles were, henna, kohl, eyeliners called surme, mirrors,
metal containers for keeping jewellery and raised sandals or
clogs made of wood, ivory and silver to keep the feet out of
water. Rosewater in a bottle, carried in a special wooden case
was also very important as no other perfume was considered proper
for the newly washed body.
Depending on the wealth and
social status of the bathing lady, these items could be simple
or very ornate and valuable, adorned with jewels and made of
valuable metals. It was also customary to take refreshments to
the bath to eat together during and after the bath like fruit,
lemonade, sherbet and sweets.
Despite the declining importance
of the Turkish Bath in the daily life of many of Turkey's inhabitants,
the traditions of bathing - using natural oils and soaps, exfoliation,
scrubbing and bathing as ritual for body and mind - has persisted.
Now, the benefits are once again being appreciated by those in
search of simpler, more natural and time-tested methods in their
bath to complement or replace the synthetically manufactured
products that are commonly found today. |