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- Etiquette as a code for social behaviour comes from the nobles in early modern France.
- The word etiquette comes from the French word Étiquette which translates to a label or a placard.
- This means there were rules—printed and posted—that governed acceptable or unacceptable social behaviour.
- Legend has it that when Louis XIV’s gardener at Versailles discovered that the aristocrats were stepping into his garden, he put up signs, or “etiquettes,” to warn them off.
- These placards didn’t have much impact, so the king himself had to intervene.
- He insisted that everyone followed the etiquette, bringing about discipline.
- Gradually, the etiquette expanded to the king’s court and codified things such as where to sit, what to wear, etc.
- While ‘etiquettes’ are said to have originated here, the earliest records of ideal social practices date back to 2400 BC in Egypt.
- Ptahhotpe, the highest-ranking officer in Egypt, is credited with preparing a list of manners as advice for young Egyptian men aspiring to climb the social ladder in those days.
- One piece of advice from his writing was, “When sitting with one’s superior, laugh when he laughs.”
Image courtesy of Karolina Grabowska
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