The sacred function of the scent is not lost in time though, and it goes on together with the secular one through the centuries.
The Book of Exodus gives a precious testimony of the use of perfume as sacred offerings in the Jewish religion. The same adoration of the
Magi narrated in the Bible demonstrates the importance of the gesture of offering sacred essences such as incense and myrrh. In addition, the perfume was used in religious ceremony to purify the body and as a real cosmetic.
Unguents, water and perfumed oils were obtained with slow process of maceration and extraction of essences from aromatic plants, woods and resins.
During the period of the ancient Greeks, the perfume leaves its religious rituals and begins to accompany everyday life of common
people. While continuing to accompany the sacred rituals and key moments like births, weddings and funeral ceremonies, perfume now also enters the profane sphere.
It’s linked to the myth of beauty and body care, and is precisely in this sense that it begins to play a fundamental role in everyday life.
Expeditions to the East through the Spice trade will then allow the discovery of new exotic and precious materials, facilitating an intense
perfume trade all over the world then known.