How did people in the desert stay cool in the past?











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8
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4












Putting on layers of clothing, building insulated shelters or simply lighting a fire are some simple yet effective ways of staying warm. Humans have shown they are quite adept at keeping themselves warm, even surviving through the last major ice age some 11,700 years ago.



Eventually, the Earth started to warm up and humans found themselves nearly everywhere. When you think of the hottest places on Earth, you would picture a desert. The largest of the hot deserts is the Sahara with average temperatures reaching around 45°C or 113°F. The Sahara is so large it covers 10 countries, one of the most ancient being Egypt which has been around since 3000 BC. As seen below, there are depictions of servants wielding fans, though most likely only the nobility would have this luxury. Undoubtedly Egypt was warm and it would be a few thousand years before the invention of electric fans and air condition. So how did everyone in those times fight the heat and stay cool?



enter image description here










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  • 3




    Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
    – Rsf
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
    – SJuan76
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
    – jamesqf
    6 hours ago






  • 2




    Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
    – Aaron Brick
    2 hours ago















up vote
8
down vote

favorite
4












Putting on layers of clothing, building insulated shelters or simply lighting a fire are some simple yet effective ways of staying warm. Humans have shown they are quite adept at keeping themselves warm, even surviving through the last major ice age some 11,700 years ago.



Eventually, the Earth started to warm up and humans found themselves nearly everywhere. When you think of the hottest places on Earth, you would picture a desert. The largest of the hot deserts is the Sahara with average temperatures reaching around 45°C or 113°F. The Sahara is so large it covers 10 countries, one of the most ancient being Egypt which has been around since 3000 BC. As seen below, there are depictions of servants wielding fans, though most likely only the nobility would have this luxury. Undoubtedly Egypt was warm and it would be a few thousand years before the invention of electric fans and air condition. So how did everyone in those times fight the heat and stay cool?



enter image description here










share|improve this question









New contributor




mr.eaver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3




    Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
    – Rsf
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
    – SJuan76
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
    – jamesqf
    6 hours ago






  • 2




    Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
    – Aaron Brick
    2 hours ago













up vote
8
down vote

favorite
4









up vote
8
down vote

favorite
4






4





Putting on layers of clothing, building insulated shelters or simply lighting a fire are some simple yet effective ways of staying warm. Humans have shown they are quite adept at keeping themselves warm, even surviving through the last major ice age some 11,700 years ago.



Eventually, the Earth started to warm up and humans found themselves nearly everywhere. When you think of the hottest places on Earth, you would picture a desert. The largest of the hot deserts is the Sahara with average temperatures reaching around 45°C or 113°F. The Sahara is so large it covers 10 countries, one of the most ancient being Egypt which has been around since 3000 BC. As seen below, there are depictions of servants wielding fans, though most likely only the nobility would have this luxury. Undoubtedly Egypt was warm and it would be a few thousand years before the invention of electric fans and air condition. So how did everyone in those times fight the heat and stay cool?



enter image description here










share|improve this question









New contributor




mr.eaver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Putting on layers of clothing, building insulated shelters or simply lighting a fire are some simple yet effective ways of staying warm. Humans have shown they are quite adept at keeping themselves warm, even surviving through the last major ice age some 11,700 years ago.



Eventually, the Earth started to warm up and humans found themselves nearly everywhere. When you think of the hottest places on Earth, you would picture a desert. The largest of the hot deserts is the Sahara with average temperatures reaching around 45°C or 113°F. The Sahara is so large it covers 10 countries, one of the most ancient being Egypt which has been around since 3000 BC. As seen below, there are depictions of servants wielding fans, though most likely only the nobility would have this luxury. Undoubtedly Egypt was warm and it would be a few thousand years before the invention of electric fans and air condition. So how did everyone in those times fight the heat and stay cool?



enter image description here







everyday-life climate people






share|improve this question









New contributor




mr.eaver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago









Lars Bosteen

34.8k8167228




34.8k8167228






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asked 16 hours ago









mr.eaver

1414




1414




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New contributor





mr.eaver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3




    Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
    – Rsf
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
    – SJuan76
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
    – jamesqf
    6 hours ago






  • 2




    Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
    – Aaron Brick
    2 hours ago














  • 3




    Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
    – Rsf
    8 hours ago






  • 1




    Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
    – SJuan76
    7 hours ago






  • 2




    You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
    – jamesqf
    6 hours ago






  • 2




    Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
    – Janus Bahs Jacquet
    6 hours ago






  • 1




    Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
    – Aaron Brick
    2 hours ago








3




3




Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
– Rsf
8 hours ago




Not exactly an answer but Bedouin in the south of Israel and the Sinai desert (and probably elsewhere as well) live nowdays without fans nor air conditioning. They live in tents and wear cloths that covers the entire body (especially the women) and still survive.
– Rsf
8 hours ago




1




1




Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
– SJuan76
7 hours ago




Of course, not many people (or any people at all) lives in the warmer zones of the deserts, and population centers appear only when the conditions allow for agriculture (oasis, the fringes of the desert, etc.).
– SJuan76
7 hours ago




2




2




You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
– jamesqf
6 hours ago




You would be wrong about the hottest places being deserts. While they can reach high temperatures during the day, they also cool off quite dramatically at night. (And the low humidity means that sweating cools effectively.) For lasting heat, you would look at the more humid areas of the tropics.
– jamesqf
6 hours ago




2




2




Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
6 hours ago




Who says they did? Staying cool is not necessary to survive.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
6 hours ago




1




1




Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
– Aaron Brick
2 hours ago




Heat kills people that have no chance to cool off.
– Aaron Brick
2 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
24
down vote













Homo sapiens evolved near the equator so have always had to deal with hot temperatures. There are a lot of articles about how people stayed cool in the days before air conditioning:




  1. Staying out of the sun at the hottest periods and possibly napping or otherwise reducing activity (the siesta in Spain)

  2. Buildings with thick walls to stay cool all year round (stone or mud will do this)

  3. Building techniques to promote shade such as verandas, porches, balconies, brise-soleils, porticos, shady courtyards, walls, trees, etc (small windows/not building entirely out of glass also helps)

  4. Buildings designed to promote ventilation, with high ceilings, routes for air to blow through, wind towers and wind catchers (towers designed to channel cool air to the ground); and sitting on the porch also exposes you to winds

  5. Water, not only to drink but spread on roofs, on curtains, etc, to cool as it evaporates

  6. Dressing appropriately (often long loose clothes, generally white)


Sources:




  • Accu Weather: 5 ways people stayed cool before air conditioning was invented

  • Forbes: How Did Humans Handle Intense Heat Before Air Conditioning Became Popular?

  • Apartment Therapy: How Did People Survive Before Air Conditioning?

  • The National (UAE): Traditional ways to keep cool during summer






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
    – LangLangC
    13 hours ago


















up vote
9
down vote













SHORT ANSWER



Ancient Egyptians kept cool by using, among other things,




  • Mud brick walls kept houses cool

  • Windows for cross draft

  • Vents in the roof to help air circulate

  • Matting for window shades

  • Damp reeds and water pots for evaporated water to cool the air

  • Roofs to sleep on at night

  • Simple, light clothing; children were often nude

  • A headrest at night to improve air-circulation round the head

  • A wet blanket to sleep in

  • Tree-lined paths


Note: The Ancient Egyptians mostly lived along the Nile rather than in the desert which, as today, was largely uninhabited.





HOUSING



Mud bricks were commonly used to build homes:




The sun-dried mud bricks, known as djebat, were used to build walls
that were then covered with mud plaster and decorated in white or soft
colors. The brick walls were well suited to Egypt’s climate as they
kept homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter
.




Further,




Windows were small squares, set high up in order to mitigate the
stifling summer heat
and prevent dust, glare and flies from entering
the house. Windows were arranged opposite each other to allow a cross
draft or breeze
to filter through; vents in the roof also permitted
air to circulate
. Loosely woven matting was used as a window shade to
stifle the heat and the glare of the sun.




Water was also used:




...people hung damp reeds over windows and placed water-filled pots in
hallways. As the water evaporated, it would cool the air
.




The poorer class




lived in one-room huts under roofs made of reeds, straw and grass.
Roofs also served as sleeping quarters on hot summer nights...




Nights can actually get fairly chilly in and around the desert (when travelling in Mali on the edge of the Sahara, I slept on rooftops a couple of times; by midnight, a blanket was needed).





CLOTHING



The masses mostly wore light garments as the last you want in a hot climate is anything heavy. Clothing was simple for the poor:




During the hot summer months, slaves, reed gatherers, brickmakers,
fishermen, boatmen and children wore little or no clothing at all
.
Nudity was not a problem, in those days.



Linen was the fabric of choice, because of its light, airy quality and
ease in mobility.




A piece of cloth was sometimes used to cover the head to protect against the sun.



enter image description here



Source: Ancient Egyptian Peasants





OTHER



Ancient Egyptians also used a headrest at night to help keep the head cool:




The use of a headrest not only ensured a relatively comfortable
position while sleeping, but also enabled air to circulate around the
head, an added advantage in a warm climate like that of Egypt.




These were also used in other regions around the Sahara:




In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes
who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were
present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries
AD, and...Dogons, until the
twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the
Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those
of their ancient counterparts,...




enter image description here



"Ancient Egyptian Carved Wood Headrest (1550 BC to 1186 BC". Source: Finch & Co.



A number of websites, such as this one, also note the use of a wet blanket to stay cool at night. People




wrapped the blankets around their bodies and went to sleep. Throughout
the night, the heat caused the water to evaporate off the blankets,
keeping the person inside nice and cool.




Ancient Egyptians and others living in and around the desert would also undoubtedly have done many of the things which their modern counterparts do, such as cooling off in the Nile (or the Niger etc.) and taking advantage of whatever shade there was from trees (wealthy Egyptians sometimes had fine gardens with tree-lined paths and running water).





(all highlighting is mine)






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
    – LangLangC
    10 hours ago












  • BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
    – LangLangC
    8 hours ago











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
24
down vote













Homo sapiens evolved near the equator so have always had to deal with hot temperatures. There are a lot of articles about how people stayed cool in the days before air conditioning:




  1. Staying out of the sun at the hottest periods and possibly napping or otherwise reducing activity (the siesta in Spain)

  2. Buildings with thick walls to stay cool all year round (stone or mud will do this)

  3. Building techniques to promote shade such as verandas, porches, balconies, brise-soleils, porticos, shady courtyards, walls, trees, etc (small windows/not building entirely out of glass also helps)

  4. Buildings designed to promote ventilation, with high ceilings, routes for air to blow through, wind towers and wind catchers (towers designed to channel cool air to the ground); and sitting on the porch also exposes you to winds

  5. Water, not only to drink but spread on roofs, on curtains, etc, to cool as it evaporates

  6. Dressing appropriately (often long loose clothes, generally white)


Sources:




  • Accu Weather: 5 ways people stayed cool before air conditioning was invented

  • Forbes: How Did Humans Handle Intense Heat Before Air Conditioning Became Popular?

  • Apartment Therapy: How Did People Survive Before Air Conditioning?

  • The National (UAE): Traditional ways to keep cool during summer






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
    – LangLangC
    13 hours ago















up vote
24
down vote













Homo sapiens evolved near the equator so have always had to deal with hot temperatures. There are a lot of articles about how people stayed cool in the days before air conditioning:




  1. Staying out of the sun at the hottest periods and possibly napping or otherwise reducing activity (the siesta in Spain)

  2. Buildings with thick walls to stay cool all year round (stone or mud will do this)

  3. Building techniques to promote shade such as verandas, porches, balconies, brise-soleils, porticos, shady courtyards, walls, trees, etc (small windows/not building entirely out of glass also helps)

  4. Buildings designed to promote ventilation, with high ceilings, routes for air to blow through, wind towers and wind catchers (towers designed to channel cool air to the ground); and sitting on the porch also exposes you to winds

  5. Water, not only to drink but spread on roofs, on curtains, etc, to cool as it evaporates

  6. Dressing appropriately (often long loose clothes, generally white)


Sources:




  • Accu Weather: 5 ways people stayed cool before air conditioning was invented

  • Forbes: How Did Humans Handle Intense Heat Before Air Conditioning Became Popular?

  • Apartment Therapy: How Did People Survive Before Air Conditioning?

  • The National (UAE): Traditional ways to keep cool during summer






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
    – LangLangC
    13 hours ago













up vote
24
down vote










up vote
24
down vote









Homo sapiens evolved near the equator so have always had to deal with hot temperatures. There are a lot of articles about how people stayed cool in the days before air conditioning:




  1. Staying out of the sun at the hottest periods and possibly napping or otherwise reducing activity (the siesta in Spain)

  2. Buildings with thick walls to stay cool all year round (stone or mud will do this)

  3. Building techniques to promote shade such as verandas, porches, balconies, brise-soleils, porticos, shady courtyards, walls, trees, etc (small windows/not building entirely out of glass also helps)

  4. Buildings designed to promote ventilation, with high ceilings, routes for air to blow through, wind towers and wind catchers (towers designed to channel cool air to the ground); and sitting on the porch also exposes you to winds

  5. Water, not only to drink but spread on roofs, on curtains, etc, to cool as it evaporates

  6. Dressing appropriately (often long loose clothes, generally white)


Sources:




  • Accu Weather: 5 ways people stayed cool before air conditioning was invented

  • Forbes: How Did Humans Handle Intense Heat Before Air Conditioning Became Popular?

  • Apartment Therapy: How Did People Survive Before Air Conditioning?

  • The National (UAE): Traditional ways to keep cool during summer






share|improve this answer














Homo sapiens evolved near the equator so have always had to deal with hot temperatures. There are a lot of articles about how people stayed cool in the days before air conditioning:




  1. Staying out of the sun at the hottest periods and possibly napping or otherwise reducing activity (the siesta in Spain)

  2. Buildings with thick walls to stay cool all year round (stone or mud will do this)

  3. Building techniques to promote shade such as verandas, porches, balconies, brise-soleils, porticos, shady courtyards, walls, trees, etc (small windows/not building entirely out of glass also helps)

  4. Buildings designed to promote ventilation, with high ceilings, routes for air to blow through, wind towers and wind catchers (towers designed to channel cool air to the ground); and sitting on the porch also exposes you to winds

  5. Water, not only to drink but spread on roofs, on curtains, etc, to cool as it evaporates

  6. Dressing appropriately (often long loose clothes, generally white)


Sources:




  • Accu Weather: 5 ways people stayed cool before air conditioning was invented

  • Forbes: How Did Humans Handle Intense Heat Before Air Conditioning Became Popular?

  • Apartment Therapy: How Did People Survive Before Air Conditioning?

  • The National (UAE): Traditional ways to keep cool during summer







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago









Steve Bird

12.4k35365




12.4k35365










answered 14 hours ago









Stuart F

4615




4615








  • 7




    And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
    – LangLangC
    13 hours ago














  • 7




    And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
    – LangLangC
    13 hours ago








7




7




And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
– LangLangC
13 hours ago




And sweating, naturally. That's the built-in AC. Liking the trend of this answer; please add some historical sources.
– LangLangC
13 hours ago










up vote
9
down vote













SHORT ANSWER



Ancient Egyptians kept cool by using, among other things,




  • Mud brick walls kept houses cool

  • Windows for cross draft

  • Vents in the roof to help air circulate

  • Matting for window shades

  • Damp reeds and water pots for evaporated water to cool the air

  • Roofs to sleep on at night

  • Simple, light clothing; children were often nude

  • A headrest at night to improve air-circulation round the head

  • A wet blanket to sleep in

  • Tree-lined paths


Note: The Ancient Egyptians mostly lived along the Nile rather than in the desert which, as today, was largely uninhabited.





HOUSING



Mud bricks were commonly used to build homes:




The sun-dried mud bricks, known as djebat, were used to build walls
that were then covered with mud plaster and decorated in white or soft
colors. The brick walls were well suited to Egypt’s climate as they
kept homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter
.




Further,




Windows were small squares, set high up in order to mitigate the
stifling summer heat
and prevent dust, glare and flies from entering
the house. Windows were arranged opposite each other to allow a cross
draft or breeze
to filter through; vents in the roof also permitted
air to circulate
. Loosely woven matting was used as a window shade to
stifle the heat and the glare of the sun.




Water was also used:




...people hung damp reeds over windows and placed water-filled pots in
hallways. As the water evaporated, it would cool the air
.




The poorer class




lived in one-room huts under roofs made of reeds, straw and grass.
Roofs also served as sleeping quarters on hot summer nights...




Nights can actually get fairly chilly in and around the desert (when travelling in Mali on the edge of the Sahara, I slept on rooftops a couple of times; by midnight, a blanket was needed).





CLOTHING



The masses mostly wore light garments as the last you want in a hot climate is anything heavy. Clothing was simple for the poor:




During the hot summer months, slaves, reed gatherers, brickmakers,
fishermen, boatmen and children wore little or no clothing at all
.
Nudity was not a problem, in those days.



Linen was the fabric of choice, because of its light, airy quality and
ease in mobility.




A piece of cloth was sometimes used to cover the head to protect against the sun.



enter image description here



Source: Ancient Egyptian Peasants





OTHER



Ancient Egyptians also used a headrest at night to help keep the head cool:




The use of a headrest not only ensured a relatively comfortable
position while sleeping, but also enabled air to circulate around the
head, an added advantage in a warm climate like that of Egypt.




These were also used in other regions around the Sahara:




In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes
who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were
present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries
AD, and...Dogons, until the
twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the
Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those
of their ancient counterparts,...




enter image description here



"Ancient Egyptian Carved Wood Headrest (1550 BC to 1186 BC". Source: Finch & Co.



A number of websites, such as this one, also note the use of a wet blanket to stay cool at night. People




wrapped the blankets around their bodies and went to sleep. Throughout
the night, the heat caused the water to evaporate off the blankets,
keeping the person inside nice and cool.




Ancient Egyptians and others living in and around the desert would also undoubtedly have done many of the things which their modern counterparts do, such as cooling off in the Nile (or the Niger etc.) and taking advantage of whatever shade there was from trees (wealthy Egyptians sometimes had fine gardens with tree-lined paths and running water).





(all highlighting is mine)






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
    – LangLangC
    10 hours ago












  • BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
    – LangLangC
    8 hours ago















up vote
9
down vote













SHORT ANSWER



Ancient Egyptians kept cool by using, among other things,




  • Mud brick walls kept houses cool

  • Windows for cross draft

  • Vents in the roof to help air circulate

  • Matting for window shades

  • Damp reeds and water pots for evaporated water to cool the air

  • Roofs to sleep on at night

  • Simple, light clothing; children were often nude

  • A headrest at night to improve air-circulation round the head

  • A wet blanket to sleep in

  • Tree-lined paths


Note: The Ancient Egyptians mostly lived along the Nile rather than in the desert which, as today, was largely uninhabited.





HOUSING



Mud bricks were commonly used to build homes:




The sun-dried mud bricks, known as djebat, were used to build walls
that were then covered with mud plaster and decorated in white or soft
colors. The brick walls were well suited to Egypt’s climate as they
kept homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter
.




Further,




Windows were small squares, set high up in order to mitigate the
stifling summer heat
and prevent dust, glare and flies from entering
the house. Windows were arranged opposite each other to allow a cross
draft or breeze
to filter through; vents in the roof also permitted
air to circulate
. Loosely woven matting was used as a window shade to
stifle the heat and the glare of the sun.




Water was also used:




...people hung damp reeds over windows and placed water-filled pots in
hallways. As the water evaporated, it would cool the air
.




The poorer class




lived in one-room huts under roofs made of reeds, straw and grass.
Roofs also served as sleeping quarters on hot summer nights...




Nights can actually get fairly chilly in and around the desert (when travelling in Mali on the edge of the Sahara, I slept on rooftops a couple of times; by midnight, a blanket was needed).





CLOTHING



The masses mostly wore light garments as the last you want in a hot climate is anything heavy. Clothing was simple for the poor:




During the hot summer months, slaves, reed gatherers, brickmakers,
fishermen, boatmen and children wore little or no clothing at all
.
Nudity was not a problem, in those days.



Linen was the fabric of choice, because of its light, airy quality and
ease in mobility.




A piece of cloth was sometimes used to cover the head to protect against the sun.



enter image description here



Source: Ancient Egyptian Peasants





OTHER



Ancient Egyptians also used a headrest at night to help keep the head cool:




The use of a headrest not only ensured a relatively comfortable
position while sleeping, but also enabled air to circulate around the
head, an added advantage in a warm climate like that of Egypt.




These were also used in other regions around the Sahara:




In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes
who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were
present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries
AD, and...Dogons, until the
twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the
Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those
of their ancient counterparts,...




enter image description here



"Ancient Egyptian Carved Wood Headrest (1550 BC to 1186 BC". Source: Finch & Co.



A number of websites, such as this one, also note the use of a wet blanket to stay cool at night. People




wrapped the blankets around their bodies and went to sleep. Throughout
the night, the heat caused the water to evaporate off the blankets,
keeping the person inside nice and cool.




Ancient Egyptians and others living in and around the desert would also undoubtedly have done many of the things which their modern counterparts do, such as cooling off in the Nile (or the Niger etc.) and taking advantage of whatever shade there was from trees (wealthy Egyptians sometimes had fine gardens with tree-lined paths and running water).





(all highlighting is mine)






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
    – LangLangC
    10 hours ago












  • BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
    – LangLangC
    8 hours ago













up vote
9
down vote










up vote
9
down vote









SHORT ANSWER



Ancient Egyptians kept cool by using, among other things,




  • Mud brick walls kept houses cool

  • Windows for cross draft

  • Vents in the roof to help air circulate

  • Matting for window shades

  • Damp reeds and water pots for evaporated water to cool the air

  • Roofs to sleep on at night

  • Simple, light clothing; children were often nude

  • A headrest at night to improve air-circulation round the head

  • A wet blanket to sleep in

  • Tree-lined paths


Note: The Ancient Egyptians mostly lived along the Nile rather than in the desert which, as today, was largely uninhabited.





HOUSING



Mud bricks were commonly used to build homes:




The sun-dried mud bricks, known as djebat, were used to build walls
that were then covered with mud plaster and decorated in white or soft
colors. The brick walls were well suited to Egypt’s climate as they
kept homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter
.




Further,




Windows were small squares, set high up in order to mitigate the
stifling summer heat
and prevent dust, glare and flies from entering
the house. Windows were arranged opposite each other to allow a cross
draft or breeze
to filter through; vents in the roof also permitted
air to circulate
. Loosely woven matting was used as a window shade to
stifle the heat and the glare of the sun.




Water was also used:




...people hung damp reeds over windows and placed water-filled pots in
hallways. As the water evaporated, it would cool the air
.




The poorer class




lived in one-room huts under roofs made of reeds, straw and grass.
Roofs also served as sleeping quarters on hot summer nights...




Nights can actually get fairly chilly in and around the desert (when travelling in Mali on the edge of the Sahara, I slept on rooftops a couple of times; by midnight, a blanket was needed).





CLOTHING



The masses mostly wore light garments as the last you want in a hot climate is anything heavy. Clothing was simple for the poor:




During the hot summer months, slaves, reed gatherers, brickmakers,
fishermen, boatmen and children wore little or no clothing at all
.
Nudity was not a problem, in those days.



Linen was the fabric of choice, because of its light, airy quality and
ease in mobility.




A piece of cloth was sometimes used to cover the head to protect against the sun.



enter image description here



Source: Ancient Egyptian Peasants





OTHER



Ancient Egyptians also used a headrest at night to help keep the head cool:




The use of a headrest not only ensured a relatively comfortable
position while sleeping, but also enabled air to circulate around the
head, an added advantage in a warm climate like that of Egypt.




These were also used in other regions around the Sahara:




In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes
who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were
present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries
AD, and...Dogons, until the
twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the
Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those
of their ancient counterparts,...




enter image description here



"Ancient Egyptian Carved Wood Headrest (1550 BC to 1186 BC". Source: Finch & Co.



A number of websites, such as this one, also note the use of a wet blanket to stay cool at night. People




wrapped the blankets around their bodies and went to sleep. Throughout
the night, the heat caused the water to evaporate off the blankets,
keeping the person inside nice and cool.




Ancient Egyptians and others living in and around the desert would also undoubtedly have done many of the things which their modern counterparts do, such as cooling off in the Nile (or the Niger etc.) and taking advantage of whatever shade there was from trees (wealthy Egyptians sometimes had fine gardens with tree-lined paths and running water).





(all highlighting is mine)






share|improve this answer














SHORT ANSWER



Ancient Egyptians kept cool by using, among other things,




  • Mud brick walls kept houses cool

  • Windows for cross draft

  • Vents in the roof to help air circulate

  • Matting for window shades

  • Damp reeds and water pots for evaporated water to cool the air

  • Roofs to sleep on at night

  • Simple, light clothing; children were often nude

  • A headrest at night to improve air-circulation round the head

  • A wet blanket to sleep in

  • Tree-lined paths


Note: The Ancient Egyptians mostly lived along the Nile rather than in the desert which, as today, was largely uninhabited.





HOUSING



Mud bricks were commonly used to build homes:




The sun-dried mud bricks, known as djebat, were used to build walls
that were then covered with mud plaster and decorated in white or soft
colors. The brick walls were well suited to Egypt’s climate as they
kept homes cool in the summer and warm in the winter
.




Further,




Windows were small squares, set high up in order to mitigate the
stifling summer heat
and prevent dust, glare and flies from entering
the house. Windows were arranged opposite each other to allow a cross
draft or breeze
to filter through; vents in the roof also permitted
air to circulate
. Loosely woven matting was used as a window shade to
stifle the heat and the glare of the sun.




Water was also used:




...people hung damp reeds over windows and placed water-filled pots in
hallways. As the water evaporated, it would cool the air
.




The poorer class




lived in one-room huts under roofs made of reeds, straw and grass.
Roofs also served as sleeping quarters on hot summer nights...




Nights can actually get fairly chilly in and around the desert (when travelling in Mali on the edge of the Sahara, I slept on rooftops a couple of times; by midnight, a blanket was needed).





CLOTHING



The masses mostly wore light garments as the last you want in a hot climate is anything heavy. Clothing was simple for the poor:




During the hot summer months, slaves, reed gatherers, brickmakers,
fishermen, boatmen and children wore little or no clothing at all
.
Nudity was not a problem, in those days.



Linen was the fabric of choice, because of its light, airy quality and
ease in mobility.




A piece of cloth was sometimes used to cover the head to protect against the sun.



enter image description here



Source: Ancient Egyptian Peasants





OTHER



Ancient Egyptians also used a headrest at night to help keep the head cool:




The use of a headrest not only ensured a relatively comfortable
position while sleeping, but also enabled air to circulate around the
head, an added advantage in a warm climate like that of Egypt.




These were also used in other regions around the Sahara:




In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes
who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were
present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries
AD, and...Dogons, until the
twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the
Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those
of their ancient counterparts,...




enter image description here



"Ancient Egyptian Carved Wood Headrest (1550 BC to 1186 BC". Source: Finch & Co.



A number of websites, such as this one, also note the use of a wet blanket to stay cool at night. People




wrapped the blankets around their bodies and went to sleep. Throughout
the night, the heat caused the water to evaporate off the blankets,
keeping the person inside nice and cool.




Ancient Egyptians and others living in and around the desert would also undoubtedly have done many of the things which their modern counterparts do, such as cooling off in the Nile (or the Niger etc.) and taking advantage of whatever shade there was from trees (wealthy Egyptians sometimes had fine gardens with tree-lined paths and running water).





(all highlighting is mine)







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 8 hours ago

























answered 10 hours ago









Lars Bosteen

34.8k8167228




34.8k8167228








  • 2




    One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
    – LangLangC
    10 hours ago












  • BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
    – LangLangC
    8 hours ago














  • 2




    One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
    – LangLangC
    10 hours ago












  • BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
    – LangLangC
    8 hours ago








2




2




One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
– LangLangC
10 hours ago






One important addition in light of the new phrasing of the Q: avoiding the land of death (the desert). Mad dogs and Englishmen…
– LangLangC
10 hours ago














BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
– LangLangC
8 hours ago




BTW The material properties of heavy linen might surprise you. Even wool isn't that bad, despite us associating it with 'warm'. Moisture transport and ventilation are required, both fabrics can deliver, if constructed properly… The headgear you show also does that
– LangLangC
8 hours ago










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