Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Was there a kiss in ancient China? When did it first appear?

Was there a kiss in ancient China? When did it first appear?

Who invented kissing is still unknown. It is said that human beings learned to kiss while eating raw meat and drinking blood. At that time, because the language was not perfect, we could only wipe our noses to send messages: wiping to the left meant danger ahead; Friction to the right indicates that there is prey ahead. When wiping the nose, the two sides accidentally touched their lips, so kissing came into being. In Europe, Italians firmly believe that they invented kissing, because they invented wine first, but this wonderful liquid was difficult to make at that time, and only men who were heads of families could drink it. In order to prevent women from stealing wine, the first thing a man does when he comes home is to smell his wife's lips. Over time, the inspection of lips from the nose becomes a mouth-to-mouth kiss. The earliest record of human kissing appeared in the era of King Dali in India 4000 years ago. King Dali put incense on his lips to lure the princess to kiss him. Followed by China before 2000. Archaeologists found a mural about kissing in the ancient tomb of Han Dynasty in China: a woman kissed a man voluntarily.

Remember to adopt