Men have been shaving since the Stone Age.

  • Razor-tweezer, circa 1550–1295 BCE
Razor-tweezer, circa 1550–1295 BCE
Credit: Penta Springs Limited/ Alamy Stock Photo

Long before the age of electric and five-blade razors, men still felt compelled to shave. The practice is so old, in fact, that it dates back to the Stone Age, roughly 100,000 years ago. The planet was quite cold at the time; somewhat counterintuitively, this made facial hair a liability rather than a way of keeping warm. A long, damp beard doesn’t exactly feel good in the rain or snow, and in extreme enough conditions it could trap enough moisture to freeze against the skin and cause frostbite.

This necessitated the first instances of shaving, though our ancestors’ methods were unsurprisingly primitive. Lacking more advanced tools, the first people brave enough to maintain their facial hair did so with seashells that essentially functioned as tweezers — they simply pulled their hair out. They later moved on to using obsidian shards, which sounds less painful and more effective. Copper razors appeared in ancient Egypt between 2686 BCE and 2181 BCE, with some featuring decorative flourishes such as goose heads and hippo-shaped handles, suggesting this more primitive method of shaving lasted longer than most of us would like to imagine.

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