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About: Bear's grease

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Bear's grease was a popular treatment for men with hair loss from at least as early as 1653 until about the First World War. The myth of its effectiveness is based on a belief that as bears are very hairy, their fat would assist hair growth in others. Nicholas Culpeper, the English botanist and herbalist wrote in 1653, in his The Physician's Library, "Bears Grease staies [stops] the falling off of the hair." Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179), Benedictine mystic, composer and woman of letters, also recommended the use of the substance in her Physica (repeated in her Causae et Curae). A number of cosmetics companies sold bear's grease, and it was a trademark of Atkinsons of London, who sold "Bears Grease Pomade". In the early 1880s in Arkansas, an ell of bear grease, formed from the hide from

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  • Bear's grease was a popular treatment for men with hair loss from at least as early as 1653 until about the First World War. The myth of its effectiveness is based on a belief that as bears are very hairy, their fat would assist hair growth in others. Nicholas Culpeper, the English botanist and herbalist wrote in 1653, in his The Physician's Library, "Bears Grease staies [stops] the falling off of the hair." Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179), Benedictine mystic, composer and woman of letters, also recommended the use of the substance in her Physica (repeated in her Causae et Curae). A number of cosmetics companies sold bear's grease, and it was a trademark of Atkinsons of London, who sold "Bears Grease Pomade". In the early 1880s in Arkansas, an ell of bear grease, formed from the hide from the head and neck of a deer, was a standard medium of exchange. (en)
  • La graisse d'ours était un traitement populaire pour les hommes qui perdaient leurs cheveux, pendant toute une période s'étendant au minimum du Moyen Âge jusqu'à la Première Guerre mondiale environ. On trouve ainsi une mention d'un traitement de la chute des cheveux par la graisse d'ours chez Hildegarde von Bingen, dans son Causae et curae, sive Liber compositae medicinae, où elle préconise de se frotter le crâne tout entier, et tout particulièrement les zones où les cheveux commencent à tomber, d'un mélange de graisse d'ours et de cendre de paille de blé ou de seigle. Beaucoup plus tard, Nicholas Culpeper, le botaniste et herboriste anglais, écrivait en 1653 dans son The Physician's Library « la graisse d'ours arrête la chute des cheveux » (« Bears Grease staies the falling off of the hair »). Le mythe de l'efficacité de la graisse d'ours reposait sur la croyance que, comme les ours sont très poilus, leur graisse permettrait d'aider à la pousse des cheveux. Un certain nombre de marques de cosmétiques vendaient de la graisse d'ours, comme la pommade à la graisse d'ours de la société Atkinsons de Londres. (fr)
  • 熊脂,是熊科动物体内的脂肪。历史上欧洲、北美、亚洲北部,包括中国东北地区的居民,在猎获熊类之后,会将其体内大量的脂肪保存使用,用途和猪油、牛油等其它动物脂肪类似。 (zh)
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  • 熊脂,是熊科动物体内的脂肪。历史上欧洲、北美、亚洲北部,包括中国东北地区的居民,在猎获熊类之后,会将其体内大量的脂肪保存使用,用途和猪油、牛油等其它动物脂肪类似。 (zh)
  • Bear's grease was a popular treatment for men with hair loss from at least as early as 1653 until about the First World War. The myth of its effectiveness is based on a belief that as bears are very hairy, their fat would assist hair growth in others. Nicholas Culpeper, the English botanist and herbalist wrote in 1653, in his The Physician's Library, "Bears Grease staies [stops] the falling off of the hair." Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179), Benedictine mystic, composer and woman of letters, also recommended the use of the substance in her Physica (repeated in her Causae et Curae). A number of cosmetics companies sold bear's grease, and it was a trademark of Atkinsons of London, who sold "Bears Grease Pomade". In the early 1880s in Arkansas, an ell of bear grease, formed from the hide from (en)
  • La graisse d'ours était un traitement populaire pour les hommes qui perdaient leurs cheveux, pendant toute une période s'étendant au minimum du Moyen Âge jusqu'à la Première Guerre mondiale environ. On trouve ainsi une mention d'un traitement de la chute des cheveux par la graisse d'ours chez Hildegarde von Bingen, dans son Causae et curae, sive Liber compositae medicinae, où elle préconise de se frotter le crâne tout entier, et tout particulièrement les zones où les cheveux commencent à tomber, d'un mélange de graisse d'ours et de cendre de paille de blé ou de seigle. Beaucoup plus tard, Nicholas Culpeper, le botaniste et herboriste anglais, écrivait en 1653 dans son The Physician's Library « la graisse d'ours arrête la chute des cheveux » (« Bears Grease staies the falling off of the hai (fr)
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  • Bear's grease (en)
  • Graisse d'ours (fr)
  • 熊脂 (zh)
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