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  2. Ancient Egyptian funerary practices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian_funerary...

    In addition to sources by ancient writers and modern scientists, a better understanding of the Ancient Egyptian mummification process is promoted through the study of mummies. The majority of what is known to be true about the mummification process is based on the writing of early historians who carefully recorded the processes—one of whom ...

  3. Nude swimming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nude_swimming

    In prehistory and for much of ancient history, both swimming and bathing were done without clothes, although cultures have differed as to whether bathing ought to be segregated by sex. Christian societies have generally opposed mixed nude bathing, although not all early Christians immediately abandoned Roman traditions of mixed communal bathing.

  4. History of nudity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_nudity

    In some ancient Mediterranean cultures, even well past the hunter-gatherer stage, athletic and/or cultist nudity of men and boys – and rarely, of women and girls – was a natural concept. The Minoan civilization prized athleticism, with bull-leaping being a favourite event. Both men and women participated wearing only a loincloth.

  5. Women in ancient Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_ancient_Egypt

    Families who wanted to know the sex of their baby sometimes placed grains of barley and wheat in a cloth sachet and soaked them in the pregnant woman's urine; if barley sprouted first, the baby was said to be a boy, and if the wheat sprouted first, the baby was said to be a girl. In ancient Egypt, the word for barley was the synonym of "father."

  6. Cosmetic Spoon: Young Girl Swimming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmetic_Spoon:_Young_Girl...

    Cosmetic Spoon: Young Girl Swimming is an ancient Egyptian carving by an unknown artist. Completed in the late Eighteenth Dynasty, sometime between 1400 BC–1300 BC, it currently resides in the Louvre, in Paris, France. It was acquired by the museum in 1852. [1]

  7. Bathing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bathing

    Detail of Jean-Pierre Norblin de La Gourdaine's Bath in the Park (1785) Astronaut Jack R. Lousma taking a shower in space, 1973. Bathing is the immersion of the body, wholly or partially, usually in water, but often in another medium such as hot air. It is most commonly practised as part of personal cleansing, and less frequently for relaxation ...

  8. Paddle doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddle_doll

    The back of a Middle Kingdom paddle doll dated approximately from 2030 B.C.E to 1802 B.C.E. Egyptologists have determined that paddle dolls represent female members of the Theban khener-troupe of singers and dancers that served at religious ceremonies for the goddess Hathor and were perhaps appended by Nebhepetre to his royal mortuary cult at Deir el-Bahari.

  9. Greek baths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Baths

    Greek baths were bath complexes suitable for bathing and cleaning in ancient Greece, similar in concept to that of the Roman baths. Greek baths are a feature of some Hellenized countries. These baths have been found in Greece, Egypt, Italy, and there is even one located in Marseille, France. [1]