Early history of keeping clean — Cambridge IELTS 15 Academic 2020 TEST 3 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 15 Academic 2020 TEST 3

Early history of keeping clean

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(0:00) Part 4. You will hear part of a lecture on the early history of keeping clean. (0:08) First, you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. (1:03) Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.
(1:11) Nowadays, we use different products for personal cleanliness, laundry, (1:17) dishwashing and household cleaning, but this is very much a 20th century development. (1:23) The origins of cleanliness date back to prehistoric times. (1:28) Since water is essential for life, the earliest people lived near water and knew something about (1:35) its cleansing properties, at least that it rinsed mud off their hands.
During the excavation of
(1:43) ancient Babylon, evidence was found that soap making was known as early as 2800 BC. (1:52) Archaeologists discovered cylinders made of clay, with inscriptions on them saying that fats were (1:59) boiled with ashes. This is a method of making soap, though there is no reference to the purpose of (2:06) this material.
The early Greeks bathed for aesthetic reasons and apparently didn't use soap.
(2:13) Instead, they cleaned their bodies with blocks of sand, pumice and ashes, then anointed themselves (2:21) with oil and scraped off the oil and dirt with a metal instrument known as a strigil. They also (2:29) used oil mixed with ashes.
Clothes were washed without soap in streams. The ancient Germans
(2:39) and Gauls are also credited with discovering how to make a substance called soap made of (2:45) melted animal fat and ashes. They used this mixture to tint their hair red.
(2:53) Soap got its name, according to an ancient Roman legend, from Mount Sappho, where animals were (3:00) sacrificed, leaving deposits of animal fat. Rain washed these deposits, along with wood ashes, (3:07) down into the clay soil along the river Tiber. Women found that this mixture greatly reduced (3:14) the effort required to wash their clothes.
As Roman civilisation advanced, so did bathing.
(3:23) The first of the famous Roman baths, supplied with water from their aqueducts, was built around 312 (3:31) BC. The baths were luxurious and bathing became very popular, and by the 2nd century AD, (3:41) the Greek physician Galen recommended soap for both medicinal and cleansing purposes.
(3:52) After the fall of Rome in 467 AD and the resulting decline in bathing habits, (4:00) much of Europe felt the impact of filth on public health. This lack of personal cleanliness and (4:07) related unsanitary living conditions were major factors in the outbreaks of disease (4:13) in the Middle Ages, and especially the Black Death of the 14th century. (4:19) Nevertheless, soap making became an established craft in Europe, and associations of soap makers (4:25) guarded their trade secrets closely.
Vegetable and animal oils were used with ashes of plants,
(4:33) along with perfume, apparently for the first time. Gradually, more varieties of soap became (4:40) available for shaving and shampooing, as well as bathing and laundering. (4:45) A major step toward large-scale commercial soap making occurred in 1791, when a French (4:53) chemist, Nicolas Leblanc, patented a process for turning salt into soda ash, or sodium carbonate.
(5:02) Soda ash is the alkali obtained from ashes that combines with fat to form soap. The Leblanc (5:10) process yielded quantities of good-quality, inexpensive soda ash. Modern soap making was (5:17) born some 20 years later, in the early 19th century, with a discovery by Michel-Eugène (5:24) Chevreul, another French chemist, of the chemical nature and relationship of fats, (5:30) glycerine and fatty acids.
His studies established the basis for both fat and soap chemistry,
(5:38) and soap making became a science. Further developments during the 19th century made (5:44) it easier and cheaper to manufacture soap. Until the 19th century, soap was regarded as (5:51) a luxury item, and was heavily taxed in several countries.
As it became more readily available,
(5:58) it became an everyday necessity, a development that was reinforced when the high tax was removed. (6:06) Soap was then something ordinary people could afford, and cleanliness standards improved. (6:12) With this widespread use came the development of milder soaps for bathing, and soaps for use (6:18) in the washing machines that were available to consumers by the turn of the 20th century.

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