As an aside, were they actually any more prone to bathing than the usual citizen of those times? I don't remember reading about any particular significance placed on bathing, like with the early Indus cultures (for example). And, I mean... It gets pretty fucking cold up here.
Well, no, depending on the standards you use, just apparently more prone to bathing than the Anglo-Saxons. I was referring to this from John of Wallingford, Abbot of St. Albans (not a bishop. Mea culpa.):
"The Danes, thanks to their habit of combing their hair every day, of bathing every Saturday and regularly changing their clothes, were able to undermine the virtue of married women and even seduce the daughters of nobles to be their mistresses."
As complaints about barbarians go, "damn their seductively superior hygiene" seems an oddly tsundere thing to complain about if they were really all raiders.
Ah, gotcha. Also yes, that's a pretty funny line and concept.
Now, this is pretty much entirely hearsay, but I remember reading one account about how the "Asians have small penises/are bad in bed" stigma first really got traction during the 20's and 30's, when there was an influx of Filipino immigrants. These were described as being "well-dressed, polite, and very skillful dancers", which apparently made them very popular with the ladies... A notion that was significantly less popular with several of the non-pinoy men, who then started trying to do something about it by trashtalking them.
It's hilarious when you think about how the term is rumored to come from the norse languages hitting the roman ear as "bar bar bar" because a bunch of us were exposed to stuff like the muppets chef and they'd be called hergidergians or some shit now.
Wouldn't it be Borkborkian, then?
< 3%
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