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EGYPTIAN BAZAAR
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2000 / DECEMBER
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which later on, converted into essences, pastilles,
powders and ointments, serve to colour little
hands and faces, perfume apartments and baths
and breaths and beards, reinvigorate worn-out
pashas, and dull the senses of unhappy married
people.' The pharmacists trained as apprentices
and having risen to the rank of master opened
their own shops.They not only sold medicinal herbs,
but also served as folk doctors who prescribed
cures for their customers' complaints.
Their myriad store of ingredients included dried
flowers, leaves, stems, seeds, tree bark and roots,
among them many still commonly used for culinary
purposes and home remedies today, such as sage,
rosemary, morning glory, hemp, marsh mallow, thyme,
momordica, violet, lemon balm, basil, summer savory,
nettle, and mahaleb. The pharmacists were at the
same time perfumers, who prepared fragrant essences. |
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