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Pure Moringa Oil - Travel Size (100% Pure, Hi-Potency)

100% Pure Moringa Oil

Moringa Seed Oil is a light oil that spreads and absorbs easily into the skin. Vitamins A, B, C, E, unsaturated fatty acids and palmitoleic, oleic and linoleic acids provide its great moisturizing and nourishing qualities. Moringa Seed Oil contains 1,700 antioxidants and is considered by experts to be one of ” the greatest cosmetic oils ever discovered”. Due to its high concentration of antiseptic and anti-inflammatory properties, Moringa Seed Oil helps diminish the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles and used to purify and heal the skin .

Tips: With high concentration of antiseptic and anti-inflammatory properties, use moringa seed oil to help heal minor skin complaints.
Great for psoriasis and eczema.
Reduces the appearance of fine lines wrinkles, purifies the skin.

How to use: Put a few drops in your hands. Rub them together and pat onto your face, neck, hair, and anywhere needed. Smooth Moringa Seed Oil under your eyes and over wrinkles for intense moisture and to reduce appearance of fine lines. For spot treatment on minor skin complaints, use a more concentrated amount on the problem area.

Benefits

Skin/Hair:

Exceptional anti-aging properties
Antioxidants and the nutrients degrade the free radicals in the skin.
Useful in removing environmental pollutants out of the hair and body. Natural detoxify and cleanser.
Naturally detoxifies and cleanses.
Encourages skin’s natural health and glow.
Helps diminish wrinkles, pimples, black heads and skin.
Beneficial in hair and scalp conditions.
Helps with psoriasis and eczema.

Green Policy:

Ingredients – Contains 100% Moringa Oil (Moringa Oleifera Seed Oil) 1/3 fl. oz.
Fragrance Free – No artificial fragrances
All Natural – Contains natural ingredients. Free from toxins, parabens, artificial colorants and other bad stuff.
Animal Testing – Contains natural ingredients
Recyclable – Some or all of packaging is recyclable
Organic
Vegan

Used in Ancient Egypt (Press “More Details”)

Moringa Amphora[/caption]

Moringa Amphora


From the Tomb of Maiherpri:18th Dynasty

Jars, Vases & Bowls

This is especially significant, since the expensive oils which some of them held were usually among the first items to be stolen because they did not keep long. Some of the dockets attached to the jars indicated that they had contained b3k-oil, a very expensive commodity made from moringa nuts. The calcite vase seen on the far right below in this plate still contained about three quarts of rancid oil when it was discovered.

The oil from the Moringa Oleifera nut was used by the ancient Egyptians. This extremely fast growing woody species (Moringa oleifera, Moringaceae)  could open up a new category of crops: "vegetable trees." It also produces masses of very small leaflets that are boiled and eaten like spinach. Being so small, the leaflets sun dry in just a few hours and can then be put in a jar and stored for the off-season, a time when dietary minerals and vitamins are often scarce. Moringa seeds could be employed to make water safer for drinking and cooking.

Maiherpri - King Moringa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maiherpri ( Lion of the Battlefield )
in hieroglyphs
U1 G1 M17 E22 D2
Z1
O1
D21
M17 M6 N21
Z1

Papyrus of Maiherpri

Maiherperi was an Ancient Egyptian noble of Nubian origin buried in the Valley of the Kings, in tomb KV36. He probably lived during the rule of Thutmose IV, and received the honour of a burial in the Valley of the Kings, the royal necropolis. His name can be translated as Lion of the Battlefield,[1]. Amongst his titles were Child of the Nursery and Royal Fan-Bearer of the Right Hand Side. There is speculation that the first title signified that he grew up in the royal nursery as a prince of a vassal territory, or perhaps was the son of a lesser wife or concubine of the pharaoh.[2] He was among the first during the New Kingdom to hold the second title, and was literally true in that he was by the pharaoh's side, likely as an advisor or bodyguard.[3] This same title was also used to denote the Viceroys of Kush later in the New Kingdom.[4]

Contents

Tomb of Maiherpri

In Maiherperi's tomb, a papyrus was found depicting him with literally "blackish" skin, leading scholars to believe he was in fact Nubian or of Nubian descent.[5] The papyrus in question was the Book of the Dead, in the eyes of O'Connor and Cline "[c]ertainly the most famous and arguably the most beautiful" Book of the Dead.[6].

The mummy was unwrapped by Georges Daressy in March 1901,[7] revealing a mummy whose dark skin matched that depicted on his copy of the Book of the Dead, and thought that this was likely Maiherperi's natural colour, unchanged by the mummification process.[8] He also had tightly curled, woolly hair, which turned out a wig that had been glued to his scalp.[9]

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