Ancient Greeks used red beards and wigs to signal slaves on their theatre plays
Ok.
celts on suicide watch
They used them to signal nordic kings and gods
>>18454173We wuzz kangz und sheisseee
>>18454096Aristophanes also made slave characters blond in plays, or at the very least named them Xanthias which meant blond-haired.
>>18454096The mental gymnastics that you dark hell-spawned demons contorts through in order to deny your place in hell are not convincing.
>>18455173Could've always built civilisation on your own, without copying superior meds.
>>18454176Those are all fairly large distances
>Ancient GreeksIrrelevant lol. Only good as a femboy farm for Roman bvlls.
>>18455264>posts a civ that copied Egypt and PersiaWhat did he mean by this?
>>18455296Exactly, Germoids are so far even Palestinians are closer despite still being pretty far
>>18455173>curly hair, long faces and long nosesyeah those are meds, not porcine germoids like you
>>18455380>copiednope
>>18455173>The mental gymnasticsare all yours... In ancient Rome, the use of blonde or red wigs (made with the hair of the germanic slaves) was not just a fashion statement, but a subject of satire and moral criticism. Classical authors often ridiculed women who attempted to imitate these colors, as blonde hair was originally associated with barbarian (Germanic and Gallic) slaves or prostitutes, who by law had to be distinguished from respectable matrons by their hair color. "Now Germania sends you captive hair; you will adorn yourself with the spoils of a defeated nation. Now she dons the captured hair of a woman from the Sugambri and adorns herself with the spoils of another." Ovid (Amores 1).Regarding Empress Messalina, who escaped from the imperial palace to work as a prostitute, concealing her nobility behind a blonde wig: "...but hiding her black hair with a blonde wig, she entered the warm brothel of old blankets." Juvenal (Satires, VI)"There march the hordes of blond-haired men, their heads seemingly engulfed in faded flames. It is a color unbecoming of civilization, a hue that evokes the wild beasts of the north and is only worthy of being displayed on the chains of a Roman triumph."— Lucan, Pharsalia, Book I.