Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle

Roman women’s hairstyles of the late first century AD are notable for their voluminous frontal hair. Described by Juvenal as "tiers upon tiers" of curls (Sat. 6. 502-3), and by Martial as a "circle of hair" (Ep. 2.66.1) the development of this style is epitomized by the portrait...

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Main Author: Janet Stephens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2013-02-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
usa
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10096
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spelling doaj-db134b5585c64636a390c3c366ce41f72021-06-15T15:28:49ZengEXARCEXARC Journal2212-89562013-02-012013/1ark:/88735/10096Recreating the Fonseca HairstyleJanet StephensRoman women’s hairstyles of the late first century AD are notable for their voluminous frontal hair. Described by Juvenal as "tiers upon tiers" of curls (Sat. 6. 502-3), and by Martial as a "circle of hair" (Ep. 2.66.1) the development of this style is epitomized by the portrait of an anonymous woman known as the Fonseca bust (Figures 1, 2 and 3. Rome, Museo Capitolino, Stanza degli Imperatori, 15, Inv. 434, photos courtesy of Catherine Stephens). It is commonly held that such frontal arrangements required wigs or hairpieces supported on wire frames.https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10096hairroman erausa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Janet Stephens
spellingShingle Janet Stephens
Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
EXARC Journal
hair
roman era
usa
author_facet Janet Stephens
author_sort Janet Stephens
title Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
title_short Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
title_full Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
title_fullStr Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
title_full_unstemmed Recreating the Fonseca Hairstyle
title_sort recreating the fonseca hairstyle
publisher EXARC
series EXARC Journal
issn 2212-8956
publishDate 2013-02-01
description Roman women’s hairstyles of the late first century AD are notable for their voluminous frontal hair. Described by Juvenal as "tiers upon tiers" of curls (Sat. 6. 502-3), and by Martial as a "circle of hair" (Ep. 2.66.1) the development of this style is epitomized by the portrait of an anonymous woman known as the Fonseca bust (Figures 1, 2 and 3. Rome, Museo Capitolino, Stanza degli Imperatori, 15, Inv. 434, photos courtesy of Catherine Stephens). It is commonly held that such frontal arrangements required wigs or hairpieces supported on wire frames.
topic hair
roman era
usa
url https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10096
work_keys_str_mv AT janetstephens recreatingthefonsecahairstyle
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