EAR
LOBE PIERCING HISTORY
The ear-lobe was probably man's
first attempt at body piercing due to the ease with which it can be
pierced. The oldest mummified body in the world was found frozen in an
Austrian Glacier in 1991, tests showed the body to be over 5,000 years
old. The body had pierced ears and the holes had been enlarged to
7-11mm diameter.
Ears were probably first pierced for
magical purposes, very many primitive tribes believe that demons can
enter the body through the ear, because demons and spirits are
supposed to be repelled by metal, ear-piercing prevents them entering
the body. Sailors used to have an ear pierced to improve eyesight, and
if the bodies washed up somewhere it would pay for a Christian burial.
In many societies ear piercing is done as a puberty ritual, in Borneo
the Mother and Father each pierce one ear as a symbol of the child's dependence
on their parents.
Ear piercing is an almost universal
practice for men and women, it's only in western society that it's
deemed effeminate. At various times in history men wore elaborate
earrings; during the Elizabethan era many famous men such as
Shakespeare, Sir Walter Raliegh and Francis Drake wore gold rings in
their ears.
"As the Roman Republic grew
more effeminate with wealth and luxury, earrings were more popular
among men than women; no less a he-man than Julius Caesar brought back
to repute and fashion the use of rings in the ears of men."
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