in the
National Archaeological Museum of Naples Roman hairstyles for men would change throughout ancient times. While men's hair may have required no less daily attention than women's, the styling as well as the social response it engendered were radically different. Lengthy grooming sessions for men were looked at as taboo. For example, the emperor
Augustus employed two to three barbers to simultaneously trim his hair, in order to speed up the process. Women's hair was carved according to different techniques based on the sex. For example, one of the primary features that is seen in many women but never in men is long hair divided by a center part. It is apparent men never wore this, since there is no biological difference in hair growth between sexes; how hair is parted is a practice determined solely by culture. Eyebrows of both sexes were tended to be treated in the same manner. During the days of the
Roman Kingdom and Early Republic, it is most likely Roman men wore their hair long with beards, in the style of Greeks. With the introduction of barbers called
tonsors in about 300 BC it became customary to wear hair short. In Ancient Rome, household slaves would perform hairdressing functions for wealthy men. However, men who lacked access to private hairdressing and shaving services or those who preferred a more social atmosphere went to a barbershop (
tonstrina). Barbershops were places of social gatherings and a young man's first shave was often even celebrated as a passage to manhood in the community. The barbers usually shaved the customers faces with iron razors and applied an aftershave with ointments that may have contained spider webs. Among the
Patrician class and
Equites, a clean shave and a closely trimmed head of hair would become the rule in Rome beginning in the second century BC. Shaving one's beard became popularized and then normalized by General
Scipio Africanus and his legions during the time of the
Second Punic War. Scipio both sought to emulate the style of
Alexander the Great, who shaved to prevent enemy soldiers from grabbing his beard in battle, as well as to signal to the conservative Roman senate that new ways of thinking were needed to defeat
Hannibal. Among those Roman men who wished to keep some facial hair, it was acceptable to shave one's mustache but not the remainder of one's face, a style then popular in Greece and seen as
Hellenic. Roman men who wore beards would not be admitted into the senate unless they shaved. , demonstrating the traditional Claudian hairstyle of short front and sides and long back. From the
Louvre, Paris. Despite rigid class expectations, there were exceptions to social custom when it came to men's hairstyles. For example, beards were permitted if the wearer was in mourning.
Numismatic evidence demonstrates Emperors and other prominent figures wearing beards during periods following the death of a close family member or military defeat. Tiberius' successor, his great-nephew
Caligula, carried on this hairstyle, even after he had begun to go bald, as did other male members of Tiberius' family. in the
Capitoline Museums In Ancient Rome it was desirable for men to have a full head of hair. This was a problem for
Julius Caesar. Being bald was considered a deformity at the time, so Caesar went to great pains to hide his thinning hair, combing his thin locks forward over the crown of his head.
Suetonius wrote: "His baldness was something that greatly bothered him." Caesar was allowed by the Senate to wear a laurel crown with which he was able to mask his receding hairline. During the Imperial times, it is easy to know how the emperors wore their hair. For example, one constant feature of
Augustus's portraits is his hairstyle, with its distinctive forked locks of hair on his forehead. The emperor was most often looked at as the trendsetter during these times. This is shown by the emperor
Nero (54–68 AD), who adopted elaborate hairstyles with curls and was the first Emperor to have facial hair, specifically a
neckbeard. In imitation of Nero, men began to curl their hair, although there is no evidence they began wearing beards in his style. Following Nero, in the Flavian period, most men had hair trimmed short on the crown and lacking strong plasticity. Hadrian's decision to grow a beard has usually been seen as a mark of his devotion to Greece and Greek culture. One literary source, the
Historia Augusta, claims that Hadrian wore a beard to hide blemishes on his face, although most historians consider the book's reliability dubious. ==See also==