Early Commercial Perfumes - Part 1
I started researching the history of early fragrances and found that both men and women used many of the same fragrances, with Westen gender-scent stereotypes only originating late in the 19th century. It was clear from what I read that many of the perfumes that I mention below were purchased and used by both sexes, so I have not tried to categorize them in that way. Following some of the fragrance names is the phrase 'and various others,' which means that there were at least 3 others perfumes by the same house released that year.
I selected the 1880 cutoff date for my 'early' perfume list somewhat arbitrarily but with some rationale. First, for unknown reasons (but possibly related to the Industrial Revolution), there was an explosion of perfumes actually marketed in the year 1880; and since I was discovering that this topic already was going to require a
lot of work, trying to include 1880 and thereafter would have been simply too much to do. Second, online sources often did not know the exact release date, so they arbitrarily gave the year of 1880 for a huge number of products that actually were created in some other year of the following decade. They did that for other years ending in 0 or 5 also, but to a lesser extent.
So here is the list, as best I could compile it, with brief historical discussions of the houses that created or produced the perfumes. No doubt I neglected to list some fragrances and made a few factual errors.
Fragrances 1370-1878
1370 Eau de la Reine de Hongrie (unknown brand)
1381 Santa Maria Novella Acqua di Rose
1390 Profumi di Capri Carthusia Fiori di Capri
1533 Santa Maria Novella Acqua della Regina (Acqua di SM Novella)*
Santa Maria Novella Acqua di Colonia*
1668 Vita Citral Eau de Nice (?)
1669 Crown Maréchale
1689 Simon Barbe Orangerie du Roy
1690 Simon Barbe Aqua Angeli
1695 Giovanni Paolo Aqua Mirabilis
1700 Eau de Carmes (multiple European producers)
Eau de la Reine de Hongrie (multiple producers)
Eau de Mélisse de Carmes (multiple producers)
1709 Farina Gegenüber Eau de Cologne Original (aka Farina 1709)
1714 Jean-Marie Farina Kölnisch Wasser
1730 Floris Night Scented Jasmine
1750 Floris Jasmine
Potter & Moore Mitcham Lavender
1760 Creed Zeste Mandarine Pamplemousse
1765 Floris Lily of the Valley
Floris Zinnia
1768 Bayleys Eau de Cologne Imperiale Russe
1770 Yardley Old English Lavender
1774 Michel Adam (later L.T. Piver) Eau de Cologne à la Reine des Fleurs
1780 Claude Mottet Eau de Fleurs d'Oranger
Creed Royal English Lavender
Caswell-Massey Cologne No. 1
1781 Creed Royal English Leather
1786 Floris Stephanotis
1789 Caswell-Massey Cologne No. 6*
1790 Jean-Louis Fargeon Sillage de la Reine
1792 Muelhens 4711 Echt Kölnisch Wasser (4711 Original) (1792)*
1795 Rancé Le Vainquer (and various others)
Jean-Marie Farina 4711
1798 Lubin Eau de Lubin
J.G. Mouson & Co. Mouson
1799 Atkinson Gold Medal (English Lavender)
1800 J.H. Fargeon Eau de Cologne
Rancé Empire
Camus Femmes de France
Castellane Parfums de Versailles
D.R. Harris Arlington
1806 Jean-Marie Farina Extra Vieille (possibly 1772)
Jean-Marie Farina Eau de Cologne Royale
Floris Night Scented Jasmine
Floris Limes (1832?)
1807 Houbigant Josephine
1808 Murray & Lanman (now Lanman & Kemp) Florida Water*
Lubin Eau de Toilette
1810 Maison Violet Josephine
1812 Père et Fils Laugier Eau de Cologne
1815 Truefitt & Hill Freshman
1816 Laugier Pere et Fils Eau d'Ispahan
1818 Joseph-Alfred Marceau Pearl White
1820 Rancé Eau Superbe
1821 Floris Lavender
1822 E. Coudray Bouquet des Souverains (and various others)
Rancé Eau de Noblesse
1824 Père et Fils Laugier Eau de Paris (and various others)
1825 Martin Friedsey Drey Alliirten=Wasser
1826 Père et Fils Laugier Eau de Lavande Royale (and various others)
1828 Guerlain Bouquet de Roi d'Angleterre (and various others)
Santa Maria Novella Garofano
Santa Maria Novella Marescialia
Santa Maria Novella Potpourri
1830 Guerlain Eau de Cologne Impériale (and various others)
J.B. Filz Wiener Lieblingswasser
1831 J.B. Filz Echt Pariser Damen-Conservations-Wasser
1832 Floris Limes
Roger & Gallet Fugue
1834 Guerlain Eau de Camélia et Vétiver (and various others)
1835 Jules Hauel Philocomel
Floris Wild Hyacinth
Marcus Spurway Eau de Roses
1837 Atkinsons Bouquet de la Reine Adelaide (and various others)
Luce of Jersey Eau de Cologne Britannica
Treu & Nuglisch Doppeltes Krönungswasser (Double Coronation Water)
1840 Caswell-Massey Jockey Club*
John Gosnell Prince Albert's Bouquet
Guerlain Bouquet Cratorisky (and various others)
Philippe Larbalestier Esprit de Lavanda (and various others)
1842 Rallet Eau de Cologne Russe
1843 Bourbon French Parfums Kus Kus*
1844 Père et Fils Laugier Bouquet de la Reine
Père et Fils Laugier Jockey Club (and various others)
John Gosnell Prince of Wales' Bouquet (and various others)
1845 Creed Fleurs de Bulgarie
Creed Royal Water
Leconte Ninon
Maurice Levy Phénomenal
Rimmel Jasmin
1846 Certosa de Pavia Ciclamino (and various others)
1848 Molinard Eaux de Fleurs
Lubin Citronella Rose (and various others)
Edouard Pinaud Lilas de France
Certosa di Pavia Muguetto
1849 Molinard Eau de Cologne
1850 Creed Santal Impérial
Jules Hauel À La Rose
Jules Hauel Heliotrope Blanc
Goet & Rifflard Bouquets (various)
Lubin Eau Distille de Fleurs d'Oranger (and various others)
Edouard Pinaud Bouquet d'Isly et Mogador
Rimmel British Violets
Guerlain Bouquet d'Esterhazy
Guerlain Eau de cologne Russe
Floris Moss Rose
Jacques Collas Bouquet Impérial
L.T. Piver Eau de Cologne des Princes
L.T. Piver Héliotrope Blanc
L.T. Piver Triple Extract au Corylopsis du Japan
Molinard La Rose
Viville Femmes de France
J.B. Filz Imperiales Veilchen
1851 Lubin Bouquets (various)
Mousson Floroïde-Aëtherion
Rimmel Lind Bouquet
Rimmel Jockey Club
1852 Breidenbach Royal Hunt Bouquet
Lubin Amber Lavender
Roussel & Bazin Bazin's
Dralle Lilionese
Mousson Floroïde Ess-Bouquet
1853 Acqua di Genova Colonia Classica 1853
Guerlain Bouquet de l'Imperiale*
Guerlain Bouquets (and other various)
Lubin Bouquet de California
Lubin Royal Amber
Breidenbach Empress Eugenie's Noseday
Breidenbach Wood Violet
John Gosnell Jockey Club (and various others)
1854 Maurice Levy Honoré Payan
Rimmel Sontag Bouquet
1855 Grossmith Mitcham Lavender
Lubin Crystal Palace
Lubin Extract of Rondeletia
Rimmel Violet
Rimmel Patchouly
Rimmel Opera Bouquet
Edouard Pinaud Bouquet de Victoria
1856 Lubin Bouquet de Caroline
Edouard Pinaud Cédrat (and various others)
Guerlain Mignon
Creed Royal Scottish Lavender
1857 Lubin Almond
Lubin Fleurs d'Italie
Guerlain Gardenia
Edouard Pinaud Bouquet de la Reine Victoria
Edouard Pinaud Végetal
Delettrez Brisas de Cintra
Delettrez Eau de Cologne du Grand Cordon
Delettrez Brisas de Cintra
Parfums Violet Jacinthe Blanche
John Gosnell Opera Bouquet
1858 Lubin Florimell
Lubin Kiss Me Quick
1859 Lubin Frangipanni (and various others)
1860 Molinard Jasmine (and various others)
Guerlain Cassie Cédrat
Rimmel Royal Bridal Bouquet
Rimmel Alexandra Bouquet
Floris Bouquet de la Reine
Yardley Exquisita
Charles Lily Bermuda
L.T. Piver Eau Triple
Rigaud Ylang-Ylang
W & G Rieger Bouquet de Faubourg St. Germain (and various others)
Edouard Pinaud Bouquet de la Reine (and various others)
Lubin Bridal Bouquet (and various others)
Hunt's Bridal Wreath
E. Coudray Chèvrefeuille
Louis Bouis Eau de Cologne
Louis Bouis Tuscia
John Gosnell Garibaldi's Perfume (and various others)
1861 Lubin Extract of Pond Lily
Atkinsons Bouquet de Madeire
Breidenbach Zouave Bouquet
1862 Creed Fantasia de Fleurs
Roger & Gallet Eau de Cologne
Crown Lavender
John Gosnell Empress Eugenie's Perfume
Gill Essence of Champaca
Yardley New Mown Hay
True & Nuglisch Souvenir de Corfu
Oriza L. Legrand Violettes du Czar
Himmelbauer Eau de Vienne (and various others)
1863 Guerlain Bouquet Napoléon (and various others)
Phalon Night Blooming Cereus
William H. Brown The Earth Filled
Maczuski Rezéda
Maczuski Violette de Mars
1864 Rimmel Turkish Scented Charm
Rimmel Patti Bouquet
1865 d'Orsay Eau de Bouquet
Rimmel Frangipane
California Perfume Co. Crab Apple Blossom
1866 Rimmel Alexandria Bouquet (and various others)
Maczuski Magnolia (and various others)
1867 Guerlain Bouquet de l'Exposition
Gill San Paquita
Roberts Acqua Distillata alle Rose*
Delettrez Bouqet de Prince Imperial
1868 Floris Red Rose
Rimmel Ihlang-Ihlang
Rimmel Vanda
Phalon Flor de Mayo
Maczuski Schützen-Bouquet
Palmer Garland of Roses (and various others)
1869 Rigaud Eau de Kananga
Rimmel Coffee
Maczuski Kiss Me Quick
1870 Rigaud Bouquet de Victoria (and various others)
Floris Tuberose
Borsari Violetta di Parma
Borsari Fiordaliso (?)
Crown Bouquet Versailles
Creed Jasmin Impératrice Eugénie
L.T. Piver Violettes de Parme
Brocard Flowering
Brocard Muguet de Mystère
Brocard Empress Bouquet
Maubert Fougère
Mignon-Boucher Violette de Parme
Guerlain Le Flacon Carre
Guerlain Héliotrope Blanc
Joseph Burnett Cologne
Joseph Burnett Kalliston
Joseph Burnett Heliotrope
Penhaligon's Eau de Cologne (and various others)
Cottan Eau de Toilette Mandarine
Girard Essence Bouquet
Girard White Heliotrope
Vibert Frères Au Muguet
Rimmel Essence of Millefleurs (and various others)
Truefitt & Hill West Indian Limes
1871 Acqua di Biella No. 1*
Edouard Pinaud Bouquet des Enfants
Edouard Pinaud Pensez-à-Moi
Delettrez Imperial Russe
Delettrez Nuit Etase
Mülhens Jacaranda
Crown Jockey Club Bouquet
1872 Penhaligon's Hammam Bouquet
Crown Essé Bouquet
Crown Ylang-Ylang
Guerlain Cuir de Russie
Lautier Fils Edelweiss
1873 Crown Sandringham (and various others)
Guerlain Exposition de Paris (and various others)
Delettrez Bouquet Mexicain
C.B. Woodworth Centennial
Yardley English Lavender
Piesse & Lubin Hungary Water
L. Leichner Leichner
John Gosnell Lemon Flowers (and various others)
1874 Crown Esterhazy
Young, Ladd & Coffin California Water
Young, Ladd & Coffin Fascination
Lazell, Dalley & Co. Red Wood
Rimmel Étoile du Nord
Rimmel Star of India
John Gosnell Forget-Me-Not
1875 Creed Bois de Cédrat
Creed Tabarôme
Roger & Gallet Eau de Cologne Extra-Vieille*
Guerlain Véritable
Atkinson Essence Bouquet
Atkinson Frangipanne
Atkinson Heliotrope
Boucicaut Essence Violette
Boucicaut Heliotrope
Rimmel Fougère Royal
Rimmel Cuir de Russie
B.D. Baldwin Queen Bess
Lundborg Recherche
Piesse & Lubin White Rose
1876 Rigaud Indian Violet (and various others)
Edouard Pinaud Corbeille Fleurie
Edouard Pinaud Lixora Breoni
Rimmel Hyacinth (and various others)
Geo. F. Trumper Wellington*
B.W. Dows East End
C.F. Knapp Geranium
Henry Tetlow Heliotrope
Henry Tetlow West End
Alfred Wright Margareta
Alfred Wright Mary Stuart
Buck & Rayner Mars
George Mitchell Mitchell's Memorial
Breidenbach Talipat Blossoms from Ceylon
1877 Young, Ladd & Coffin Criterion
Charles Lubrecht Imperial
Geo. F. Trumper Marlborough*
Geo. F. Trumper Wild Fern
Guerlain Pao Rose
1878 Edouard Pinaud Bouquet de l'Exposition
Edouard Pinaud Brisas de las Pampas
Rimmel Marimon
John Gosnell Florida Water (and various others)
Young, Ladd & Coffin Arcadian Pink
Young, Ladd & Coffin Tally-Ho
Charles Lubrecht Circassian
Prochaska Madeira Bouquet (and various others)
Frères Gellé Jockey Club
Frères Gellé Violette
Palmer India Bouquet
1879 Crown Alpine Lily
Krigler Pleasure Gardenia
Guerlain Eau de Cologne pour Frictions (and various others)
Goetting Florida Water (and various others)
Young, Ladd & Coffin Edenia
Oriza L. Legrand Essence Oriza
Palmer Frangipanni
Palmer White Lilac
Palmer White Rose
Colgate Wedding March
Perfume Houses
Carthusia - Fiori di Capri (1380)
The history of Carthusia perfumes starts with the monastery of San Giacomo on the island of Capri. Legends recounts that in 1380, the father prior of the Carthusian Monastery of St. James on the island, heard that queen Joan of Anjou was going to visit. He picked a bouquet of the most beautiful flowers there and put them in a vase of water to honor her. After 3 days, when was going to throw them out, he noticed that the water had acquired a beautiful but mysterious fragrance unknown to him. He consulted a friar who specialized in alchemy, and the friar traced the origin of the scent to
Garofilium silvestre caprese, Capri's wild carnation found on Mt. Solaro.
In 1948 the Carthusian Prior found the old perfume formulae, and with the permission of the Pope, he revealed them to a chemist from Piemonte in the North of Italy, who then created for the monastery the smallest perfume laboratory in the world, calling it "Carthusia", i.e. Charterhouse. Fiori di Capri by Carthusia is a chypre floral fragrance for women and men, reformulated and launched in 1948. The nose behind this fragrance is Laura Bosetti Tonatto. Top notes are ylang-ylang, gardenia, tuberose, white flowers, orange blossom, Mandarin orange, cyclamen, Turkish rose, and Bergamot; middle notes are carnation, hyacinth, white honey, cloves, wild strawberry, incense, iris, violet leaf, pineapple, plum, and nutmeg; and base notes are oakmoss, white musk, sandalwood, amber, labdanum, cedar and patchouli. Carthusia fragrances continue to be developed from the ancient distillation techniques that were used by the monks.
Santa Maria Novella - Acqua di Rose (1381)
The Officina Profume Farmaceutica dei Santa Maria Novella, one of the oldest pharmacies in the world, began when Dominican friars arrived in Florence, founded a monastery, and began to cultivate a garden that included medicinal herbs for balms and pomades. Around 1332, when the merchant Dardano Acciaioli fell ill, he was treated by the SMN friars with extracts of bearberry. As a sign of gratitude, he finance the construction of their Chapel of San Niccolò, which is still the main hall of the museum-store.
The first documented evidence of the production of scented waters dates back to 1381, when Santa Maria Novella monks introduced Acqua di Rose. The Black Death plague had ravaged the population for decades, and in response the Dominican friars distilled their rose water. Many schools of ancient and medieval medicine were based around the theory of miasma: essentially, the belief that illness in the body was caused by foul-smelling, unclean air or vapors. It was assumed that sweet-smelling air had the capacity to negate the effect of bad air, and therefore it was believed that pleasant scents like those of fragrances could be used to fight disease. So at the time, the rose water was used both to sanitize rooms and for personal care, taken with wine or in pills.
Their concoctions served the Officina Profumo Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella Rosa all through the Middle Age. They supplied balms, perfumes, and herbal and fruit essences mixed with liqueurs provide relief to weary, ill in decaying cities. One could consider this practice the first true naturopathy. In 1533, young Catherine de Medici commissioned SMN to create a perfume for her marriage to the future king of France. When she left Florence, she asked for a perfumer, Renato Bianco (René le Florentin later in Paris), to be in her entourage to make the fresh fragrance, Acqua della Regina, in France. He had been given the recipe by the friars, and he created the perfume for Catherine. Its top notes are citrus fruits and petitgrain; middle notes are neroli, rosemary, cloves, and lavender; and its base notes are patchouli and musk. This perfume, which made SMN famous, is still made today. (Its formula is also the one that young Giovanni Paol Feminis took to Cologne, Germany and re-introduced in 1725 as Eau de Cologne.) The original Acqua della Regina is still made and sold today.
In that same year, the friars of SMN created Acqua di Colonia. It is a citrus aromatic fragrance with bergamot, Amalfi lemon, neroli, and tangerine top notes; lavender, petitgrain, clove, and rosemary heart notes; and a benzoin base note. It too is still made.
Though word of their renowned remedies spread world-wide, it wasn’t until 1612, that Officina Profumo-Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella opened its doors to the public. At that time Fra Angiolo Marchissi established a retail operation in Florence, selling essentially unnamed elixirs and liqueurs. In 1659 the company received the title of His Royal Highness' Foundry from Ferdinando II de'Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, placing it under the protection of the Medici family. During that century, Santa Maria Novella increasingly developed new alcoholic liqeuers with medicinal properties, and by 1700 they were famous throughout Europe. In 1749, the Officine's apothecary codified and standardized its recipes in a book.
In 1828, the perfumes Garofano, Marescialia, and Potpourri were introduced, and the company's fame continued to grow. However, in 1866 its property was confiscated by the Italian state, and the pharmacy ownership eventually passed to Cesare Augusto Stefani, nephew of the monastery's last director. Since then, four generations of his family have run the business. The company has continued its devotion to the original, centuries-old recipes and production methods, combined with modern technology and innovation.
Vita Citral - Eau de Nice (1668)
Eau de Nice is said to have been released in 1668 by Vita Citral of Monte Carlo. It was a woody scent apparently meant primarily for women, but this is not well documented.
Crown - Maréchale (1669)
In 1669 a company called Crown Perfumery created Maréchale as a sachet powder for Madame la Maréchale d'Aumont, wife of the Marshall of France under King Louis XIV. Subsequently it was said that the air in the salons of the time was frequently heavily perfumed with this powder for hair and wigs. The sachet powder perfume is said to have included coriander, iris, and nut grass. (However, some sources claim that it was rather a chypre type of formulation, containing rose, orange flower, vetiver, vanilla, orris, neroli, musk, ambergris, cloves, and santal.) After her use of it made the scent popular, Crown apparently produced it for sale to others of the aristocracy. No further history is known of the Crown Perfumery of that time.
However, in 1872, the corsetier William Sparks Thomson founded a Crown Perfumery Co. and was granted the use of the royal crown symbol by Queen Victoria. He catered to the city's high society with his patented corsets and later with opulent perfumes. He had found that due to the tightness of corsets, ladies often would faint; and he produced lavender-based smelling salts to help revive the customers, which led him to opening the perfumery. In its first year, Crown created several perfumes, including Essé Bouquet, Ylang-Ylang, Hwthorn Bloom, and Wild Flowers of India. Over the next 75 years the company made other perfumes and went through several sales. In 1989 it was sold by Unilever to biochemist Bary H. Gibson. He said that his goal was to return to it the 'art of the perfumer,' hand blending formulations based on traditional recipes.
Earlier in the 1980s, Gibson had bought several antique perfumery books, including an original 1669 formula book from the Crown Perfume Company that included a recipe for Maréchale. He attempted to recreate the classic Crown fragrances using recipes from this book, starting with Crab Apple Blossoms renamed as Crown Bouquet. Eventually his business sagged as profits declined, and product quality decreased. Crown Perfumery was sold in 1999 to Clive Christian Perfume, which then resurrected it and brought back some of the original scents, which are still made.
Simon Barbe - Orangerie du Roy (1689)
Simon Barbe, the first glover-perfumer in Paris, created this fragrance for King Louis XIV, the Sun King who was said to have been terrified of bathing (because he, like many of the nobility of the 17th century, believed that water spread disease, partially by causing the skin pores open) and only took three baths during his life. His Versailles court was called the 'Perfumed Court' because its bowls were filled with flower petals, its furniture was coated with perfumes, the main fountain was scented, and visitors were sprayed with perfume upon entering the palace.
Barbe is credited with creating Aqua Angeli, a perfumed water for scenting the shirts of the King, around 1690. It was composed of aloe wood, nutmeg, clove, storax, and benzoin boiled in rosewater, with a jasmine, orange flower, and musk base.
Barbe wrote two perfumes manuals, the first one in 1693, 'Le Parfumeur François,' which "teaches all the ways to extract the odors of flowers and to make all forms of perfume compositions," was meant to instruct non-professionals. His second and most famous treatise was 'The Origin of Perfumes,' published in 1699. It was intended for professional perfumers, presenting his knowledge for "those who pick up flowers and necessary to the glovers, wigmakers and liqueur sellers."
Giovanni Paolo Feminis - Aqua Mirabilis (1695)
Giovanni Paolo Feminis, born in 1660, was very young when he left his village of Crana in the Italian Alps and went to Germany to find a job. He settled first in Bergka (today Rheinberg), working as an apprentice, then in Mainz, and finally Cologne. Here he opened a distillery in 1693 and focused on the production of herbal and soothing infusions. He built a reputation by personalizing perfume recipes he had received from monks. Feminis developed a distillation method that allowed him to create perfumes that were 95% alcohol-based. Such a high level of alcohol distillate meant that he was able to create scents that were much lighter and fresher than the oil- and water-based products that came before. The first of these products in 1695, was called Aqua Mirabilis, which loosely translates to 'wonderful' or 'admirable water,' and its medinical properties were certified by the Cologne Faculty of Medicine. He apparently made several similar perfumes shortly after the first one.
When Feminis became too old to keep the business running, he invited his nephew, Giovanni Maria Farina, to take over. Farina tweaked a few of his uncle's established recipes, including one that astounded him. In a letter to his brother, he described it, saying, "My perfume is reminiscent of a beautiful spring morning after the rain. It is made of oranges, lemons, grapefruit, bergamot, flowers and fruits from my native country... It refreshes me while stimulating my senses and my imagination." This fragrance was composed of 30 essences. Its name was changed eventually to the famous Eau de Cologne (now made by Roger & Gallet). It quickly became so popular that the name became a generic term for a certain kind of fragrance product.
Giovanni Maria (Jean-Marie) Farina - Eau d Cologne (1709)
In 1709, Giovanni Maria Farina founded his Farina gegenüber, the oldest perfume factory still in existence, in Cologne. He created Eau de Cologne, the basic recipe for which he had inherited from his master and uncle, Giovanni Paolo Feminis, and it rapidly became famous worldwide. He chose its name to honor his new hometown in gratitude for being granted citizenship, because there were strict laws then regarding foreign immigrants. The fragrance was given a French version of the name because French was the language spoken then in European high society and by tradesmen. His ability to produce a constant, homogeneous fragrance consisting of dozens of mono-essences was seen as a new sensation. A single vial of this formulation cost half the annual salary of a civil servant of the time. When free trade was established in Cologne by the French in 1797, the success of Eau de Cologne prompted many other businessmen to sell their own counterfeit fragrances under the same name of Eau de Cologne, which contributed to the term becoming generic. Registered trademarks did not exist then.
The perfume company has held royal warrants as purveyors of to the German, French, Italian and British Royal Families. Today the 8th generation of the Farina family still produces the original eau de cologne under the Roger & Gallet brand as Jean-Marie Farina Extra Vieille and still uses a red tulip, implying great beauty, as the company logo. (The tulip was a precious item that originally bloomed mainly in the gardens of Turkish palaces, and the Dutch had paid huge sums for bulbs.) The company headquarters is still in Farina House in Cologne, where the Farina Fragrance Museum is also located. The formula for Eau de Cologne remains a secret.
Floris - Night Scented Jasmine (1730)
Floris was founded by Juan Famenias Floris at 89 Jermyn Street in London in 1730. Floris had learned about making fragrances in the Montepellier perfumery on the Cote d'Azur and had worked as a resident barber in the London St. James Hotel for a number of years. Recently married, he and his wife Elizabeth invested her dowry in the shop. The couple and their seven children lived upstairs from the shop, while all the perfumes were created in the cellar below it. His first creation that year was Night Scented Jasmine, created in an attempt to capture the notes of warm Mediterranean nights, made after a visit to his family home in Menorca, Spain.
Floris Limes was created and documented by Floris in his black ledger book in 1740. (However, its official launch apparently was recorded later as either 1806 or 1832.) Limes was said to have been made to cut through the sticky fog of summertime London. It has top notes of Amalfi lemon and petitgrain, middle notes of Linden lime blossom, neroli, and lily of the valley, and a musk base note. Lily of the Valley (1760), a green floral composition, was another of the earlier fragrances created by Juan Floris. Although it is a traditional single-flower scent, there are over 250 different perfume oils used to formulate it. (It was re-launched in a slightly different version in 1847.)
In 1820, Floris received its first Royal Warrant as 'Smooth Pointed Comb Maker' to King George IV. In 1878, Mary Anne (Floris) Bodenham and husband James took over the business from Mary Anne's brother, Joseph Floris. Production continued at the Jermyn Street location until 1989, when a factory was opened in Devon. The Jermyn Street location continues to be the company's headquarters and flagship store, under direction of descendants of the Bodenham and Floris families.
Floris continues to offer fragrances that have been in its collection from its earliest days, such as Limes (1832) and Stephanotis (1786), as well as newer scents. Floris also creates bespoke perfumes, giving customers the opportunity to customize an existing Floris scent. Notable company customers of the brand have included Florence Nightingale, Mary Shelley, Beau Brummell, Queen Victoria, explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes, the Duke of Windsor, and Marilyn Monroe.
Potter & Moore - Mitcham Lavender (1750)
John Potter and William Moore, known as 'garden physicists' (experts in herbs and flowers), founded their house and distillery in 1749 and began to produce bath and body products with natural ingredients, many of the scented with lavender. The London headquarters store became known as Lavender House. Potter and Moore named their first product Mitcham Lavender in 1750, after the town which was then a center of herb production, and especially of lavender. An 1881 census records 230 Travellers (Romany herb sellers) living in vans and tents on Mitcham Common, and there was an annual Mitcham Fair, which was an important Traveller gathering. The Travellers would buy bunches of lavender at the Fair, which they then sold on the streets of London. Buyers placed the lavender in drawers or behind books in their bookcases to perfume the air.
The business grew and flourished, especially under the control of James Moore, grandson of William. When James Moore died in 1851, the business went to his illegitimate son, James Bridger, who ran it until his death in 1885. In 1886, the company was bought by W.J. Bush & Co. and continued to produce distilled products, with peppermint, spearmint, rose, pennyroyal, lavender, and chamomile. In the 1890s the firm merged with Stafford Allen & Sons. Eventually it fell into stagnation, but it was re-started in 1937 by the famous comedienne Gracie Fields. In 1968 it merged with two other companies to form Bush Boake Allen, the world's largest supplier of flavors and perfumes, and the Potter & Moore division was sold to E.C. De Witt & Co. In 2000 the perfume firm was acquired by International Flavors & Fragrances (IFF).
Creed - Zeste Mandarine Pamplemousse (1760)
The Creed company was founded as a London tailoring house in 1760 by James Henry Creed, and in that year he delivered a pair of scented leather gloves to the newly crowned King George III as a gift. At the King's request, he then created Zeste Mandarine Pamplemousse perfume. This was followed in 1781 by Royal English Leather, made in honor of the King and still available today. In 1854, the firm relocated their headquarters to Paris at the request of Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie, for whom Creed made Imperatrice Eugenie. Its history during this time is not documented well, but it is known that it flourished and became a supplier to most of the royal courts of Europe, including France, Austro-Hungary, and Spain. In 1885, the company created Fleurs de Bulgarie for Queen Victoria.
20th century clients included the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Winston Churchill (Tabarome), John F. Kennedy (Vetiver), and Grace Kelly, and more recently the perfume Love in White has been worn by both Laura Bush and Michelle Obama. In 2006, Princess Kate Middleton received the first bottle of Creed Royal Ceylan. The house has been passed continuously from father to son. It is now under the control of Olivier Creed and his son Erwin, the seventh generation descendant, although a majority share was purchased in 2020 by the equity group BackRock.
Bayleys - Eau de Cologne Imperial Russe (1768) (Cussons Imperial Leather)
Bayleys of Bond Street was founded in London in the early 1700s by William Bayley. In 1768, Russian Count Grigory Orlov, a favorite of Empress Catherine the Great, commissioned Bayleys to make a perfume called Eau de Cologne Imperiale Russia. At the time, high-quality leather was exported widely from Russia and was recognizable by a distinctive aroma left by its birch oil tanning process, and the Count wanted a fragrance reminiscent of this leather. The company continued to make popular fragrances, and in 1921 Bayleys was purchased by Cusson Sons & Co. of Manchester. Cussons perfumes have included Eau de Cologne (1925), Lily of the Valley (1925), and Mists of Moon (1930). In 1938, Tom Cussons used the original version of the first Bayleys perfume to create the soap Russian Leather, soon renamed Imperial Leather. More recently, because Tom Cussons was a keen admirer of orchids, an orchid was used on the Bayley's logo when Cussons collaborated with design agency Hark to launch a new Bayley's of Bond Street brand making bespoke fragrances.
Yardley - Old English Lavender (1770)
Yardley of London was officially established by the Cleaver family in 1770, producing perfumes and soaps. (Apparently an earlier version of the company existed prior to this, but records of it were lost in the Great Fire of London of 1666 and little is known about it.) Their first perfume was Old English Lavender in 1770, with additional notes apparently added to it in 1801. In 1823 the firm was purchased by William Yardley after it went into bankruptcy; and in 1841 it became Yardley & Statham, which expanded the product line and exported products to the U.S. In 1851 the company exhibited in the Crystal Palace at the Great Exhibition, and that same year the name was changed to Yardley & Co. In 1860, the perfume Exquisita was introduced.
Yardley re-launched English Lavender, their signature scent, in 1873, using
Lavandula angustifolia grown for them in the South of England. Top notes of this version included lavender, rosemary, eucalyptus, and bergamot; middle notes were clary sage, cedar, and geranium, and base notes were musk, tonka bean, and oakmoss. Later, a different contemporary edition was launched in 2015.
Business boomed during the later years of the 19th century. Around 1910, Yardley moved into retail with the opening of their first store in London. During the Second World War, product output was cut to 25% of pre-war figures due to government orders, but it rebounded after the war. Yardley was acquired by British American Tobacco in 1967. Since then it has been sold several times until it was acquired in 2009 by Wipro.
Michel Adam (L.T. Piver) - Eau de Cologne à la Reine des Fleurs (1774)
The company A la Reine des Fleurs was founded in 1774 by Michel Adam, a master glove perfumer, on rue des Lombards in Paris. That was also the name of his first fragrance that year. Adam soon became an official supplier to the court of Louis XVI and other royal families of Europe. In 1799 the business went to his son, who then passed it on to a cousin, Pierre-Guillaume Dissey in 1805. Dissey hired Louis-Toussaint (L.T.) Piver as an apprentice, and in 1813 he became a partner. When Dissey died in 1823, Piver became sole owner.
In 1850, Piver created Eau de Cologne des Princes and Héliotrope Blanc, followed by other fragrances, including Violettes de Parme in 1870. In 1889 the company produced Rêve d'Or and in 1896 Nijni-Novgorod. In 1896, Jacques Rouché, son-in-law to L.T. Piver, became director of the business. Rouché was convinced that the future of the business lay in the use of chemistry knowledge, and he hired Georges Darzens, a prominent chemist, to assist in product development. In 1896, Darzens had discovered amyl salicylate (an aromatic, orchid herbal note used as a blender), which he described as "the fragrance of flowering clover under the heat of August." He used this substance in a Piver perfume, Le Trèfle Incarnat, which was introduced in 1898. Piver claimed that its Trèfle Incarnat was the first perfume to contain artificial essential oils.
After 1817 the business expanded to dozens of branches, and Piver products could be purchased England, Belgium, Spain, Austria, Russia, and Brazil. L.T. Piver clients included the Bonaparte family and Sarah Bernhardt. A factory was opened in Grasse for processing flowers, a second factory was opened in Aubervilliers to manufacture cosmetic products, and by 1926 Piver employed a workforce of 1,500, producing 50 tons of products per day. During the Art Deco era, both Lalique and Baccarat provided sculpted crystal containers for the firm. L.T. Piver claimed a number of prizes and medals in the Universal and Colonial Exhibitions. Today L.T. Piver headquarters is still located in Paris, and it offers contemporary versions of some of its classic fragrances in addition to newer perfumes.
Claude Mottet - Eau de Fleurs d'Oranger (1780)
Mottet built one of the first commercial perfume factories in Grasse in 1841. It was taken over in 1926 by Fragonard and the perfumer Eugène Fuchs, whose business eventually became the Fragonard perfumery. There is little information available about Mottet, but it is known that he introduced the perfume Eau de Fleurs d'Oranger and 1780, and it is thought that this fragrance may have been the inspiration for some of Jean-Louis Fargeon's compositions.
Caswell-Massey - Cologne No. 1 (1780)
Caswell-Massey was the first apothecary and fragrance company in the U.S., and it now is the oldest American consumer brand still in operation. It was founded in Newport, Rhode Island in 1752 by Scottish-born Dr. William Hunter and initially sold medical supplies, such as lavender and verbena oils. Subsequently they began to make triple-milled bath soaps and hand soaps, shaving soaps, and other grooming accessories. They also sold imported fragrances from Europe. Hunter blended 20 of his own numbered colognes, and it is believed that Cologne No. 1, called Elixir of Love, was created in 1780. Cologne No. 6 (1789) was used by George Washington, and the company still makes it. At about the same time, White Rose perfume was introduced for women and became a favorite of Dolley Madison. The fragrance Jockey Club, introduced in 1840, represented a large jump in popularity for the company products that had outdoorsy scents.
The firm took its present name when then-owner John Rose Caswell formed a partnership with businessman William Massey in 1876, operating a store in Newport and one in New York City. The company was owned and managed by a Taylor family from 1936 to 1989, at which time it was sold to another group. In the 1970s, profiles could be created for each customer – what they liked to do, eat, their size, shape, favorite colors and pastimes - to land on the perfect bespoke scent. Customers would ‘try on’ scents for a few weeks before their personal formulations were mastered. Around that time, Caswell-Massey began to struggle with increased competition, and in the last 45-50 years it has undergone several sales and re-brandings.
Other famous clients of Caswell-Massey have included the Marquis de Lafayette, Lewis and Clark (who took the Castile soap on their Western expedition), Cole Porter, George Gershwin, the Astors and Vanderbilts, Judy Garland, Katharine Hepburn, Greta Garbo, John Denver, John F. Kenney and Jacqueline Onassis, Debbie Harry, Joni Mitchell, and The Rolling Stones.
Jean-Louis Fargeon - Sillage de la Reine (1790)
Jean Fargeon was an apothecary with 'royal privilege,' providing products for the royal court. His shop in central Montpellier on the Grand Rue was called Le Vase d'Or (Golden Vase). By 1668, it was said that he "had perfected the recipes of a large number of products, classed according to usage as either 'compositions for health' or 'perfumes for embellishment.'" His son Jean-Louis, born in Montpellier in 1748, apprenticed with his father as a glover and perfumer and later set up a shop in Paris. He was a favorite of the socialite Madame Du Barry, and through her he met young Queen Marie Antoinette, who was convinced by his perfumed gloves into making him her personal perfumer. Using themes of naturalness and adapting them to the Queen's changeable moods and preferences, he became he made ever-more-lavish fragrances. In 1790 he created Sillage de la Reine (The Queen's Wake) in her honor, after she had asked him to visit her in Trianon and to create a perfume that would capture its ambience for her. Sillage de la Reine was a lush floral blend featuring tuberose, rose, jasmine, and bergamot. This was the first perfume that he subsequently sold to other aristocrats. For Marie Antoinette he also created Le Jardin Secret, with bergamot, cardamom, jasmine, incense, rose, sandalwood, vanilla, patchouli, amber, and tonka bean.
It is said that when imprisoned in the Temple Tower of Paris, Marie Antoinette kept Sillage de la Reine in a midnight-colored jade vial. She eventually slipped it to her most trusted confidant, the Marquise de Tourzel, shortly before her own execution. This original flask, nicknamed the Black Jade, remains in the possession of de Tourzel's descendants.
Jean-Louis had many apprentices, including Pierre-François Lubin. In 1801 he published a classic treatise on the preparation of perfumes. After his death in 1806, the business was taken over by one of his descendants but eventually failed. The modern historian Elisabeth de Feydeau stumbled upon an original recipe for Sillage de la Reine while preparing a biography of Fargeon and mentioned it to a friend, perfumer Francis Kurkdjian. Kurkdjian subsequently recreated the perfume over the course of 18 months, and it has been made available for sale by subscription.
Mülhens - 4711 Echt Kölnisch Wasser ('Real Cologne Water,' or 4711 Original) (1792)
Sometime after Jean-Marie Farina's Eau de Cologne became popular in 1709, its rights and licenses were sold to entrepreneur Wilhelm Mülhens. He went into partnership with another unrelated individual named Farina and formed a company with that name, producing a fragrance derived from the original recipe. However, he diluted and preserved the flower essences in alcohol in a new way, giving the scent a standard strength, an innovation for the time. Years later, when a court ruled that further use of the Farina name was illegal, Wilhelm Mülhens' grandson Ferdinand renamed the company 4711, which referred to the house number of the original Farina business in Cologne. He was allowed to continue use of the geographical indication in its title because the fragrance had been made there since 1799.
4711 eventually was used in most of the royal houses of Europe, and it was said to be a favorite of Mozart, Napoleon, and Queen Victoria. The scent revolves around a base of citruses and orange flower, similar to many of the modern eau de colonia compositions. In 1990 the company name was changed to Mülhens GmbH & Co., and in 1994 it was bought by Wella. Procter & Gamble bought Wella in 2003, and in 2006 they sold the 4711 brand to Mäurer & Wirtz. 4711 is still in production today.
Rancé - Le Vainqueur (1795) (masculine)
The Rancé family had been famous since the early 1600s for producing perfumed gloves in Grasse for the French aristocracy. In 1795, François Rancé turned entirely to perfumery. He created innovative and refined perfumes, which secured him the favour of Napoleon. He became the Emperor's favourite perfumer, and he created for Napoleon Le Vainqueur ('The Winner'), Triomphe, L'Eau de Austerliz, and Le Roi Empereur. He was then appointed official purveyor to the Imperial Court. In honor of Josephine Bonaparte he created l'Impératrice, which he presented to the Empress in a precious Sevres porcelain box. The last example of this objet d'art is kept in the Rancé archives. Other early Rancé fragrances included Eau Superbe (1820) and Eau de Noblesse (1822).
In 1902, Alexandre Rancé moved the company to Milan. Several generations of Rancé have followed. The head of the family firm today is Alexandre's granddaughter Jeanne Sandra Rancé, along with her son Jean Maurice Alexandre Rancé. Its headquarters in Milan now houses a museum that brings together vintage Rancé products, parts of the archives, and the Rancé collection of perfumery objets d'art.
Lubin - Eau Vivifiante (later Eau de Lubin) (1798)
At age 18 in 1792, Pierre-Francois Lubin, an apprentice to Jean-Louis Fargeon, moved from Paris to Grasse. There he worked for another perfume master, Tombarelli, and learned his 'Italian Method.' In 1790, he moved back to Paris and completed his training under Jean-Louis Fargeon, and in 1798 he opened his own house there. It was called Au Bouquet de Roses, a discrete tribute to the dead queen Marie Antoinette, but later was called Aux Armes de France after the Royal Coat of Arms. He provided perfumed ribbons, ball masks, and rice powders to 'Les Merveilleuses,' socially exalted women trendsetters who frequented the drawing rooms of Napoleonic France. His creations became popular with 'Les Incroyables,' the first Parisian dandies who emerged after the Revolution of 1789. His most famous creation was the perfume Eau Vivifiante, later renamed Eau de Lubin. This fragrance won him the favor of the Imperial Court and Empress Joséphine, the wife of Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1821 he became the official supplier to King George IV of England and in 1823 to Tsar Alexander of Russia. In 1830 House of Lubin was again named Official Perfumer of the French Royal Court by King Louis-Philippe, the last King of France. In 1830, he became one of the first perfumers to become popular in the U.S.
In 1844, Felix Prot, who had trained under Lubin and remained close to him, took over the house, and he expanded its retail network. He also constructed Europe's first modern perfume factory, on the Côte d’Azur in Cannes, in 1873. It used steam machines to extract essential oils for the perfumes. The Prot family remained involved until the end of the 1960s. In 1969, Paul Prot, Jr., the great-grandson of Felix, sold the company to an industrial group. In the 1970s it was run by Roger & Gallet, and then it was purchased in 1984 by the German perfume house Mülhens. In 1994, Mülhens was taken over by Wella. The house acquired in the early 2000s by Gilles Thevenin, a former head of creation at Guerlain, with the support of Laurent Prot, son of Paul Jr. Production was moved back to France in 2004. Lubin perfumes are now produced in small quantities in the Loire valley and distributed through a network of several hundred high-end retailers in about 30 countries. Its wares and antique documents can be found displayed in the Musée international de la Parfumerie in Grasse.
J.G. Mouson & Co. - Mouson (1798)
House Mouson was founded in 1798 by August Friedrich Mouson in Franfurt, Germany. He had been trained in Berlin as a soap boiler, and he had worked as plant manager for a soap factory in Breitgasse. After the factory's owner died, he took over the company and released his first perfume, Mouson. He eventually handed the perfume firm over to his son Johann Georg, who expanded its business and began to produce his own perfumes. They had branch offices in Paris and London and displayed their wares at the World's fairs of the second half of the 19th century. By 1898 their catalogue offered more than 700 products, including famous fragrances influenced by Japanese fashion. The company produced perfumes and soaps until 1972.
Atkinson - Eau de Cologne Gold Medal (English Lavender) (1799)
Atkinson was founded in London in 1799 by James Atkinson. Originally he mainly sold rose-scented bear grease balm. He had traveled from Cumberland with a tame bear, and his shop became known as 'that marvelous perfume shop with the most terrifying bear.' The company's logo was a chained bear. In 1799 James invented English Lavender Eau de Cologne Gold Medal, strikingly different (warmer, spicier, and stronger) from the Italian-style colognes then dominating the market. It featured notes of bergamot, lemon, orange, lemon, mandarin, bitter orange blossom, lavender, rosemary, and rose. King George IV loved it, and in 1826 he named James as official perfumer to the Royal Court. In 1832 the company moved to Old Bond Street. Bouquet de La Reine Adelaide, another English Lavender, and several others were produced in 1837, and in 1861 Bouquet de Madeire was introduced.
The bear grease, reputed to facilitate regrowth of hair for bald men, remained in production until after the First World War. For a long while, the company was nearly dormant, producing occasional perfumes and being sold several times. But in 2013 it was bought from Procter & Gamble and relaunched by Italy-based firm Perfume Holding.
Atkinson products have been used by Napoleon Bonaparte, the Duke of Wellington, Admiral Nelson, the Tsar of Russia, the King of Italy, Sarah Bernhardt, and Beau Brummell.
D.R. Harris - Arlington (~1800) (masculine)
Originally named Harris' Apothecary, D.R. Harris is the U.K.'s oldest chemist. The company takes its name from those of its two founders, surgeon Henry Harris and his cousin, pharmaceutical chemist Daniel Rotely (D.R.) Harris. It was founded in 1790 on James Street in London. It became a favorite of inebriated high-society gentleman, including Oscar Wilde, for its 'Pick-Me-Up Hangover Cure.' Over two centuries, the family established a reputation selling Lavender Water, Classic Cologne, and English Flower fragrances to the fashionable gentry. In 1938 it was awarded its first Royal Warrant as chemists to Her Majesty the Queen, later the Queen Mother. In 2002 they were appointed as chemists to the Prince of Wales, and in 2012 a Royal Warrant for the Queen was added. Arlington, a citrus aromatic fragrance, is still produced and sold. Their pharmacy and their perfumery production continue at 29 St. James Street, with many of the items still produced by traditional methods.
Truefitt & Hill - 1805 (1805)
Truefitt & Hill was established in 1805 in the Mayfair district of London by William Francis Truefitt, who styled himself as hairdresser to the British Royal Court. It claims to be the oldest barber ship in the world. The first product from Truefitt was 1805, introduced that year. It is an aromatic fragrance for men, with top notes of Mandarin orange, bergamot, and cardamom; middles notes of geranium, lavender, and clary sage; and base notes of sandalwood, cedar, and musk. Freshman, a woody aromatic composition, was launched in 1815. Its top notes are bergamot, rosemary, and Amalfi lemon; middle notes are lily of the valley, clary sage, and jasmine, and base notes are woody notes, musk, and amber. The firm received several Royal Warrants, beginning with one from King George III and with a current appointment by the Duke of Edinburgh. In 1911, Edwin Hill set up a barber shop on Old Bond Street, and H.P. Truefitt (William's nephew) moved his company to that address in 1935 to create T&H. Other Truefitt regional outlets were merged into the current company in 1941. In addition to the headquarters on St. James Street, there are many other locations, including Toronto, Beijing, Sydney, Dhaka, Prague, Singapore, Bangkok, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Kuwait. They sell a mixture of traditional and modern toiletry goods, including the original Spanish Leather, Sandalwood, West Indian Limes, Lavender, and Rose, and main shop still provides a traditional hot towel wet shave.
Famous clients include Charles Dickens, William Thackeray, Lord Byron, Oscar Wilde, Beau Brummerl, members of Parliament, William Gladstone, the Duke of Wellington, Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, Winston Churchill, Alfred Hitchcock, Frank Sinatra, Stewart Granger, Fred Astaire, Cary Grant, and John Wayne.
Houbigant - Josephine (1807)
Houbigant Parfum was founded in Paris in 1775 by Jean-François Houbigant of Grasse. He hung a hand-painted sign of a basket of flowers or the door of his little shop on rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Originally the firm sold gloves and bridal bouquets, but in 1807 Armand-Gustave Houbigant, son of the founder, joined the house and was commissioned to create Josephine, a special perfume for the French Empress. He also was appointed official perfumer to Napoleon Bonaparte and his court, and it is said that Napoleon carried Houbigant scents in his campaign chest during his years of conquer in Europe. Armand-Gustave taught the titled women at the Court of Versailles how to perfume their fans so that just a flutter would send out a fragrant romantic message.
In 1838, Houbigant was awarded the license of official supplier to Queen Victoria of the U.K. Paul Parquet became joint owner in 1880, and in 1882 he created Fougère Royale. Considered a breakthrough in the world of perfumery, the earthy notes of Fougère Royale opened up a new segment of men’s perfumes. While still having some notes of floral and citrus, it tended toward earthy, mossy, woody notes, with Mediterranean herbs like lavender and clary sage, amber, patchouli, and tonka beans. During this period, company branches were opened in the U.S., England, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Poland, and Romania. The New York office had its own perfume manufacturing facility.
Tsar Alexander III named Houbigant perfumer to the Imperial Court of Russia in 1890, and he created the perfume The Czarina Bouquet in honor of the Empress, Maria Fyodorovna. In 1912, perfumer Robert Bienaimé joined the firm and created fragrances, including the renowned Quelques Fleurs (the first true multi-floral bouquet made), until founding his own company in 1935. Production of the famous Fougère Royale stopped for a period of time but was revived in 2010 with the help of perfumer Rodrigo Flores-Roux from Givaudan. Houbigant fragrances now are being manufactured by LOFT Fashion and Beauty Diffusion of Monaco.