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S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
05
K-I-S-S-I-N-G:
Tidbits from the History of Kissing
No one really knows where the fi rst smooch came from. One
less-than-romantic theory suggests it began with ancient
mothers passing chewed-up food to babies, which is 1) not
sexy, and 2) gross. And kissing isn’t universal: People in Japan
and Siberia only started kissing relatively recently, and some
sub-Saharan African societies still don’t do it.
✖ ✖ ✖
A
thousand years ago, cere-
monial kisses were much
more common than today.
Th
ere was the holy kiss of
peace, exchanged to symbol-
ize unity in Christ;
the kiss of
veneration, bestowed on holy
objects; you even got a kiss
when you received an aca-
demic degree. By the 18th
century, however, much of
that ceremonial pecking had
been replaced by handshakes,
oaths, and written docu-
ments.
One ritual kiss is still
as popular as ever: that of
couples sealing their marriage
vows.
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German psychology profes-
sor Onur Güntürkün spent
Perpetual Morning
Breath
The erotic signifi cance of the
kiss didn’t become dominant
in Europe until the 17th cen-
tury. Not coincidentally, that
was around the same time that
dentists in France fi rst promot-
ed the use of toothbrushes.
(Yes,
the French were on the
cutting edge of dental hy-
giene!) Before toothbrushes,
the average European mouth
was such a grim place that
16th-century maids often car-
ried clove-
studded apples
when courting, insisting their
suitors
take a bite before at-
tempting a kiss.
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two years watching people make out in public parks and air-
ports, eventually observing 124 “scientifi cally valid” kisses.
He concluded that people are
twice as likely to tilt their
heads to the right when kiss-
ing than to the left. What’s
the deal? Turns out our kiss-
ing proclivities are deter-
mined
way in advance of the
junior prom: According to
Güntürkün, the direction you
turn your head while in the
womb will likely be the direc-
tion you tilt your head when
kissing.
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Kissing has been banned
repeatedly.
Roman emperor
Tiberius outlawed kissing in
public ceremonies, hoping it
would help curb the spread of
herpes. In 16th-century Na-
ples kissing was punishable
by death, and in 1439 Henry
VI banned it to combat the
plague. In 2004,
Indonesia
passed laws that ban not only
public nudity, erotic dancing,
and “sex parties,” but also
punish public kissing with up
to fi ve years in prison.
Flash-
ing carries a stiff penalty, too:
Behind the Kiss:
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