Napoleon and his use of the Cologne

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Napoleon Bonaparte always paid a real attention to his personal hygiene, preferring the ablutions with water to the coquetry of dandies and aristocrats. Disturbed by the overpowering perfumes, the Emperor never perfumed himself but made a particularly abundant consumption of Cologne.

If the Emperor’s toilet was centered around his superb Athenian, it also consisted of daily baths whose hot water filled with steam, in the manner of the Arab baths, the rooms devolved for this purpose. Madame de Rémusat (1780 – 1821), lady attached to Josephine de Beauharnais (1763 – 1814), tells in her Memoirs that the Emperor, once washed, “made such floods [of Eau de Cologne] on himself that he used up to 60 rolls per month “(the “rolls” being the name given to the flasks of Farina’s Eau Admirable).

Napoleon Bonaparte used every day about 3 bottles of these Cologne which contained about 75 ml of fragrance.

The French National Archives have thus found an invoice indicating that for the month of October 1808, 72 bottles of Eau de Cologne were ordered! Napoleon was indeed generously sprayed with Cologne after his ablutions and rubbed vigorously his whole body with a brush. He attributed to this habit – which he claimed to have brought back from the Orient (as perhaps his long hot baths) – his health and considered it to be most important. The story tells that on the eve of each decisive battle, he held at his desk one of the green flasks of Farina house. He attributed to the Cologne the same qualities usually given to coffee, and used to pour a few drops of Cologne on a handkerchief and then push it against his lips, then on his foreheads and temples.

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The Cruel Lack in St. Helena.

allthecactifindahome on July 26th, 2020 at 21:36 UTC »

Fragrantica describes it as:

Top notes are orange oil, peach, basil, bergamot and lemon; middle notes are cyclamen, lily, melon, jasmine and bulgarian rose; base notes are patchouli, tahitian vetiver, musk, sandalwood, oakmoss and cedar

in case anyone wanted a more specific description. Sounds nice, though I'm not a big fan of citrus fragrances in general.

Inner_Partisan on July 26th, 2020 at 20:48 UTC »

FYI: In a way, 4711 isn't just a cologne, it's the cologne. It's literally the reason why cologne is called "cologne" in English - it's made in Cologne (Köln), and was for a long time the only type of cologne known in large parts of the West.

KazzarP on July 26th, 2020 at 19:52 UTC »

It's actually a lovely citrus scent and rather weak in comparison to modern EDPs. I always have a large bottle in my fridge.