The Middle Ages
In the middle ages eunuchs always
had full heads of hair. Eunuchs are males who have been castrated (had
their testicles removed), and if this was done before puberty they do not
go bald.
Some eunuchs who when given male hormone did not have increased
hair loss.
This means that an adequate level of male hormone need only be
present for male pattern baldness to occur in susceptible men, thus
destroying the popular myth (with bald men at least) that bald men are
more virile, because it was assumed that they had more male hormone.
Aristotle also noted that neither
Eunuchs nor women grew hairs on theirs chests, he proposed that this was
due to the lack of testes.
Hair has been adorned since man
first appeared, from bones in the hair of cavemen to feathers in the heads
of North American Indians.
Colouring of the hair has also been around
since the ancient Egyptians and the Assyrian's. It is certainly not a
modern day fashion as most people like to think.
In the 1500's men's head hair was
cut short but beards flourished.
Women generally braided their hair many
married women revived the Orthodox Jewish custom of only showing their
hair to their husbands.
In later cultures wigs were worn
mainly by women, then in 1624 Louis XIII of France launched the era of the
big wig - by wearing one. The fashion held sway in Europe and its colonies
until the American and French revolutions swept away such symbols of rank.
Shakespeare in
nearly all his tragedies used
hair loss to portray an ageing king, fool or villain - Never a virile
young man.
A bit ironic, considering
that Shakespeare himself was bald.
In Britain by the 1700's men who
were losing their hair also seemed to be losing their minds! They began
to
over compensate for their thinning and balding by taking the drastic step
of wearing long, curly, powdered wigs.
Up to the beginning of this
century men wearing wigs was certainly not thought of as odd but nowadays
this is rarely acceptable except on barristers and judges, where it is
still part of an age old tradition.

The Cowboy Years
Even in America in the 1800's
tough and hardened cowboys lined up to spend their hard earned money on
worthless "Snake Oil", hair growing tonics peddled by charlatan
"Doctors" from the side shows and stages of the great wild west
medicine shows.
Cowboys also used the trick of
rubbing grease into their hair, causing it to look thicker, whilst
slightly effective it was a very messy process.
Another ancient belief as
illustrated by the story of Samson, was that when you took the hair of an
enemy you also took possession of his strength and courage.
An Indian
warrior with the greatest number of scalps hanging from his wigwam was a
very powerful man indeed.
The following is an old remedy
for hair loss, dating back to cowboy times
Peach Tree
If the kernels be bruised
and boiled in vinegar until
they become thick and
applied to the head,
marvellously, make the hair grow
again upon bald places or
where it is too thin.
Culpepper 1653

Modern Time
So does hair loss affect man
today as much as it did in years gone by?
Considering the pressures we face
living in a highly competitive, youth orientated and grooming conscious
society, hair loss probably affects us even more today both at work and in
our social lives than ever before.
The problem is that our high
technology culture has made virtually no progress in finding a true lotion
or pill cure for hair loss that can be taken internally or applied
externally.
Even today some
of the lotions and potions we are offered have little
more success than those offered to the ancient Egyptian's.
What is worse is that some of
today's more intelligent men who are stressed out by suffering hair loss
are often just as likely to believe the claims made for worthless
solutions and treatments as these cowboys of yesteryear.
This is largely
due to the advertising hype that is produced in the hair treatment
business and as the hair product industry is a multi - million pound
industry with huge advertising budgets it is fairly easy to be carried
away with all the colourful brochures and advertising bumph that promises
instant sex appeal and change of personality once someone's hair returns.
Most of the brochures show that as soon as hair is restored there is a
woman at the man's side. This unfortunately is not true in real life but
it certainly does appear to help sell the product.
Hair today continues to be
expressive of ideas - a full head of hair is considered a sign of youth
and vigour, thus wigs, toupee's and hair transplants are likely to be with
us well into the 21st century - and beyond.
In the United Kingdom there are a
large number of laymen owned hair clinics and so called hair consultants
without any experience who sell worthless scalp massages, hair growth
lotions and pills or even ultraviolet ray treatment that they claim will
help grow hair and stop or slow down the rate of hair loss.
Of course the only real truth
found in these clinics is their financial success.
The sad fact of the
matter is that men today who suffer from hair loss are usually so intent
on finding a solution, they'll try almost anything.
It's not that they're looking for
some fountain of youth.
They're just tired of hair loss making them look
ten to fifteen years older than they really are, and they are committed to
doing something decisive and positive about it.
Some men are quite artistic with
their remaining hair, growing it longer where possible and brushing it
sideways to cover up gaps, a technique that doesn't stand up to strong
winds or vigorous exercise.
By reading all the advice on this
site most people will at least be in a position to decide which treatment
if any is suitable for them.